MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH Global Currency Research Team For research analysts, please see contact list at the back of this material. Click to search for research by currency March 26, 2015 Currencies Global FX Pulse Buying Dollar Dips USD Correction Complete? US data continue to confound, with labour markets performing well even as our 1Q GDP tracker declined from 3% to 0.9%. Rate expectations have eased, supporting our US economists’ view that the Fed will hike rates late. However, rate expectations have fallen even below our own dovish projections. Hence, we believe it will not take a lot to make rates bounce back, terminating the USD-bearish corrective pattern. Stay Clear of Geopolitics. Geopolitics have complicated issues and, should tensions in the Middle East escalate, a further easing of cross-border capital flows would not bode well for double-deficit currencies such as ZAR, TRY, BRL, or even AUD and NZD, which look vulnerable owing to externally funded liability positions. Nonetheless, trading on geopolitics does not offer favorable enough risk/reward, in our view, as politically-motivated market moves tend to be short-lived. Buying USD into Weakness. Instead, we use dips caused by the strong countertrend oil rally to establish USD/NOK long positions. High oil production and inventory growth suggest oil prices could stay low, highlighting Norway’s need to restructure its non-energy sector, which would require NOK to stay soft. USD should return to strength once US data recover from current weakness. A strong US March labor market report would return us to more aggressive USD buyers. Closed Trades Entry Stop Target Stopped at 3.0690 on 24-Mar-15 Long USD/PEN Took profit at 2.5550 on 23-Mar-15 Long USD/TRY Took profit at 68.00 on 23-Mar-15 Short EUR/INR Close at NY Close on 26-Mar-15 Long EUR/NOK Active Orders Entry Stop Target Long USD/THB 32.78 32.00 35.00 Long USD/ILS 3.9940 3.9000 4.2500 Long CLP/COP 4.10 4.08 4.28 Long JPY/KRW 9.28 9.00 9.80 Limit Orders Entry Stop Target Buy USD/NOK 7.48 7.32 8.30 See page 11 for more details. Changes in stops/targets in bold italics. 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 Deflation & Depreciation: It’s Complicated P6 Technical Chart of the Week – JPY/KRW P10 Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendations P11 G10 & EM Currency Summary P14 Global Event Risk Calendar P16 Tactical Indicators P18 This Week’s Edition MS FX Positioning Tracker P19 We explore lowflation and its impact on FX moves. Lowflation has played out as a theme, but the largest depreciation has not been in lowflationary currencies. With volatility likely to remain high, externally vulnerable high-carry currencies could continue to be the underperformers, without a catalyst for lowflationary central banks to become more aggressive. That said, we do expect lowflation to be a theme that lasts beyond the first Fed hike, and hold our lowflationary trades. Macro Forecasts P20 FX Forecasts P22 For important disclosures, refer to the Disclosures Section, located at the end of this report. MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse FX Overview We believe that the USD correction is running out of steam, although increased geopolitical events in the Middle East could add to volatility. The correction in FX markets continues to be driven by USD, but Fed members have increasingly noted the transitory nature of the data soft patch. Hence, we view the current USD setback as providing a buying opportunity, but await the March payroll report. Structural EUR flows remain bearish – EUR is being used for funding – while investment inflows remain hedged. FDI flows are having an increasing currency impact, with USD to benefit, while GBP losses support. Data-Driven USD “How long will the USD correction last?” is a question we are now frequently asked, as the debate regarding the USD trend gains momentum. We believe that the bullish multi-year trend will persist, with potential for further significant gains over the next couple of years. However, the data-dependency of Fed policy, not just lift-off, but the subsequent path, suggests that there will be periods when a more tactical approach will be required, as is currently the case. The potential for an escalation of geopolitical risks in the Middle East will also add to volatility. Indeed, there is strong evidence that the broad correction currently developing in currency markets is being driven by the USD side of the equation, with local/regional news and data only generating differentiation on the crosses. We have adopted a more tactical approach to our trading recommendations in the current environment. Last week, we reduced some our long USD positions and tightened stops on the remaining positions. We continue to focus on relative value cross trades in the current environment, such as our long JPY/KRW strategy, and await the US labor market data before we consider re-entering bullish USD strategies. The focus remains on the US data and, more importantly, the Fed’s interpretation of the data. The current soft data patch (weather and port disruption) is consistent with the current USD setback, but has increased the focus on the upcoming April 3 non-farm payroll release. The US labor market has remained relatively robust despite softness seen in other indicators; hence, a disappointment here could prolong the current USD setback. Indeed, our US economists have a below-consensus forecast of 195k for the March non-farm payrolls report (see U.S. . Economics: Key Data Watch Calendar (20 Mar 2015)). In this scenario, we would then expect the market to require a stronger signal, either from the data and/or the Fed regarding policy, to resume the USD bullish trend. However, continued improvement in the labor market data could see USD returning to its bullish multi-year trend much earlier. Indeed, we see the US labor market currently acting more as a leading indicator, rather than a lagging economic activity as is traditional. In this regard, we found the comments over the past week by the Fed’s Williams interesting, insofar as the current data softness is described as transitory, suggesting that the Fed is willing to look through the slowdown and act according to the longer-term outlook. Indeed, Williams suggests that once the short-term data volatility is stripped out, he sees an economy with a “good head of steam”, which is getting close to full employment. Williams sees the strengthening domestic economy overwhelming the energy and currency impacts. The Fed’s Bullard has also played down the impact of the strengthening USD. The market has yet to react to this signal, but if the Fed strengthens the message that the current soft data patch is not likely to blow policy off course, USD could quickly regain its footing. Exhibit 1 US Rate Expectations Fed Funds Rate (%) Ian Stannard, James Lord 1.66 1.46 1.26 1.06 0.86 0.66 0.46 0.26 0.06 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Tenor (m) Today 8 9 10 11 12 10 days ago Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research The current EUR/USD rebound, slightly breaching the 1.10 level over the past week, is consistent with the rebound seen in the EU-US yield differential. However, closer examination points once again to the US side of the equation being the driving force. Indeed, eurozone core yields have continued to push lower as a result of the ECB’s QE program. This has led to the most significant divergence between EUR and European yields since the EUR decline started six months ago. It is the decline in US yields which has been driving the 2 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse EUR/USD rebound. Interestingly, EUR has been gaining bullish momentum on many of the crosses as well. Structurally Bearish EUR We have been highlighting the use of EUR for funding purposes (see FX Pulse: EUR – A Funding Currency (13 Nov 2014)), not just for portfolio but also for longer-term business investment. The rise of European bank lending to overseas entities and the sharp increase in foreign corporates issuing in EUR are evidence of this, in our view. The ECB’s Draghi has also noted that QE has been working by bringing corporate borrowing costs down. We would agree, but would also add that given the lack of demand for borrowing by eurozone corporates, it is foreign companies which have been able to take advantage of lower borrowing costs in the eurozone. This would suggest that EUR remains a major transmission mechanism for ECB policy. Exhibit 2 US Investor Flows to EMU and EUR/USD border purchases that are important when it comes to assessing the currency impact. Given the low level of rates in Europe, it is logical for foreign companies to raise the funds in EUR to purchase European companies. Again, the use of EUR as a funding currency suggests that it will not benefit from any increase in cross-border investment flows. This suggests that there is unlikely to be much of a positive impact on EUR from increased M&A or FDI inflows to the eurozone. FDI Gaining Importance Overall, we expect FDI flows to become an increasingly important factor for currency markets. Indeed, FDI, as a percentage of overall inflows, have been increasing, a trend we would expect to continue, not just for the eurozone, but also among the major currency blocs. While overall FDI flows are not as large as overall portfolio flows, their increasing influence suggests that FDI (including cross-border M&A) flows will be important for currency markets. In many DM markets, FDI flows are comparable to equity markets in terms of magnitude, although generally speaking not as large as bond market flows. This is certainly the case with regard to the eurozone, where FDI flows regularly exceed equity market flows, suggesting that these would normally be an important factor for EUR, but while EUR is being used for funding, this is unlikely to deliver the traditional support. Exhibit 3 US Portfolio and Equity Market Inflows 2.0% 1.5% 1.0% FDI Inflows Equity Inflows Bond Inflows (RHS) 8% 7% 6% Source: Macrobond, Morgan Stanley Research, 12m rolling sums 0.5% The decline of EUR has been attracting inflows into eurozone asset markets, as evidenced by the outperformance of the Eurostoxx since the beginning of the year. We have argued that these inflows have been currency-hedged, so have not provided EUR support, leading to a breakdown of the correlation between EUR and the Eurostoxx year to date. However, the media has been highlighting another potential investment inflow to the eurozone – foreign direct investment flows with the purchases of eurozone assets and companies by foreign investors. 0.0% 4% -0.5% 3% -1.0% 2% -1.5% 1% Although the M&A inflow data to the eurozone have been more mixed recently, recent media reports of various deals suggest that these are showing signs of gaining some positive momentum. Usually, this would be seen as a positive for a currency. However, it is the funding details of these cross- -2.0% 5% 0% 91 93 95 97 99 01 03 05 07 09 11 13 Source: Haver Analytics, Morgan Stanley Research. Measured as % of GDP, 12m rolling sums. Even in the US, FDI flows tend to match the size of equity flows. During the last USD-bullish super cycle in the late 1990s to early 2000, which was driven by investment inflows, both equity and FDI inflows to the US reached the equivalent of 7% of GDP. As at the end of last year, these flows were running around 1% of GDP, at historical lows. However, we would now expect the FDI inflows to the US to show a pick- 3 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse up, in line with the increase in cross-border M&A inflows to the US, which have now turned positive after an extended period of being negative. We would see this as a further source of USD support, especially if funding for such investment is being carried out in EUR. US corporates have been responsible for a significant proportion of the foreign entities issuing in EUR in recent months (around 35%), with the rate running at levels last seen in 2007. Slowing FDI Leaves GBP Vulnerable One place where we believe that FDI flows, or lack of flows, will play an important role in the coming months is the UK. GBP has been a major beneficiary of FDI inflows over the past couple of years, with business investment in the UK outstripping the pace seen in much of the rest of the G10. These flows have been a significant contributor to the funding of the UK’s record current account deficit. However, business investment in the UK is now slowing and our analysis of M&A inflows suggests that the longer-term FDI inflows to the UK are starting to slow and have even turned negative in recent months. This contrasts with the positive FDI dynamics seen for the US and Europe. the outcome of the election but also what we believe to be a more challenging policy environment for GBP after the election (see UK Economics | Election Monitor: Poll Perspective #4: Will the Budget Be Decisive? (13 Mar 2015)). Increased fiscal austerity, an EU in/out referendum (Conservatives) and progressive tax measures (Labour) are the potential policy outcomes under our base case scenarios of the new government being led by one of the traditional parties. Hence, it may be some time before GBP is able to more fully benefit from FDI flows, likely exposing GBP more fully to volatile portfolio flows. Here the UK rate debate will also become more important. Exhibit 5 UK CPI and GBP/USD Exhibit 4 FDI Inflows to UK and GBP TWI Source: Macrobond, Morgan Stanley Research The 0% Club Source: Macrobond, Morgan Stanley Research, 12m rolling sums, ₤ Bn Political uncertainty ahead of the UK election has been cited in business surveys as the reason for the slowing of business investment. With the opinion polls for the election remaining neck-and-neck between the Conservatives and Labour, this uncertainty is likely to persist, and could even intensify over the coming weeks. The UK parliament will be dissolved on March 30, by which time the individual political parties need to have published their election manifestos (there is an incentive to leave this right to the last minute so as not to reveal policies to rivals). As a result, the election campaign will step up a gear next week, highlighting not only the uncertainty regarding The UK has joined the 0% inflation club with February CPI printing at record-low levels of 0.0%Y, increasing the risk of the UK slipping into deflation over the coming months, as BoE Governor Carney has warned. Indeed, our UK economists have taken their inflation forecasts lower and project negative CPI prints in March and April (see UK Economics: Inflation: Sticky services inflation suggests lowflation driven by external factors (24 Mar 2015)). The UK has now joined the US with CPI at 0%Y, with the eurozone and Switzerland still in negative territory at -0.3%Y and -0.8%Y, respectively. Sweden is also only just above zero, at 0.07%Y. Moreover, there are other signs that UK economic growth is moderating, with the ONS housing market data showing prices falling for the first time in 10 months in January, although retail sales surprised positively in February. GBP has been the weakest of the G10 currencies over the past week, with the GBP/USD rebound remaining muted despite the broader USD correction, allowing EUR/GBP to extend a more 4 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse significant recovery, which we believe can target the 0.75 area, a 50% retracement of the decline seen since the beginning of the year. Meanwhile, we believe that the GBP/USD rebound has provided a renewed selling opportunity. Weaker US Data, Weaker EM Data EM currencies have recovered over the past two weeks on the back of the more dovish-than-expected FOMC meeting, combined with further soft data on the US economy. However, we are unwilling to enter into any bullish high-beta EM trades versus USD, for a number of reasons. The outlook for USD remains highly uncertain. We are very much dependent on how the trajectory of US macroeconomic data evolves. Although the balance of data in the last few weeks has been on the softer side, we clearly saw how USD regained its footing in response to the firmer-than-expected CPI data coming from the US. The reality is that, in all probability, rate hikes from the FOMC will be on the table from June onwards, and market volatility is likely to be high as we swing from data surprise to data surprise. This uncertainty and volatile market environment does not fill us with confidence that capital flows will be rushing back into EM. Exhibit 6 Weaker Korea Macro Should Pressure KRW 120 8 115 6 110 4 105 100 2 95 0 90 -2 85 80 Sep 08 -4 Sep 09 Sep 10 Sep 11 South Korea Consumer Sentiment Sep 12 Sep 13 Sep 14 South Korea GDP Growth % y/y Source: Macrobond, Morgan Stanley Research This is particularly the case given the ongoing evidence that EM economies remain far from recovery. The majority of macroeconomic data continues to come in on the weak side, with a few exceptions such as in the Central and Eastern European region, which is benefitting from the weak EUR. China data remain weak, while South Korea consumer confidence continues to head lower and is threatening to break multi-year lows. Thailand exports are falling at a fast pace, and Singapore’s industrial production data for February came in below expectations. The Central Bank of Turkey has signalled growth concerns for 1Q. EM currencies can only really hope to rally versus USD because of a weak rather than strong EM per se. This view has been corroborated by the price action as well, in our view, with EM currencies underperforming the rebound in EUR. Finally, the risk backdrop is far from stable. The escalation of the conflict in Yemen, bringing Saudi Arabia and other Arab states into more direction confrontation, is prompting a greater risk premium to be priced into oil prices. The fear is that the conflict will continue to escalate beyond what has been considered so far to be a proxy conflict between Iran and Saudi Arabia into a more direct confrontation. With the medium-term outlook of a strengthening US economy and likely rate hikes from the FOMC, we remain confident about the strength of USD. EM fund flows continue to show outflows from the asset class, with EM-dedicated equity funds showing outflows of US$2.68 billion in the week ending March 20, following a US$3.5 billion outflow in the prior week. All this said, clearly a downside surprise in the upcoming US labor market report would result in further downward pressure on USD and prompt some recovery in EM versus USD. Nevertheless, for the above reasons we are unwilling to position in high-beta EM. For now, we stick to positions that are less dependent on the FOMC and the path of US data. For example, long USD/ILS and long USD/THB are both lowbeta crosses that should work in the near term. The Bank of Israel in particular has shown its hand by pushing back against recent ILS strength. We expect this to continue, and stick with our long USD/ILS view. Long JPY/KRW We also like to buy JPY/KRW. We think that this is a positive long-term trend that should to some extent be relatively insulated against the broader USD trend. Should the current risk correction continue, JPY/KRW would be a natural beneficiary, in our view. We also see growing confidence in the outlook for the Japanese economy. Our economics team is highlighting that continued gains are expected in wage growth, with a positive impact on domestic demand. The economic upswing is expected to be gradual but durable into 2017. This would suggest that more JPY weakness is not necessarily needed in order to support the economic outlook, leading to a more stable JPY outlook. 5 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Deflation & Depreciation: It’s Complicated Dara Blume Exhibit 1 The juxtaposition of ECB QE with the approach of the first Fed hike has led to large currency moves, with high carry currencies vulnerable to external funding conditions leading the sell-off. This is likely to continue in the run-up to the first Fed hike, with currencies trying to maintain competitiveness levels regionally. This implies European G10 and EM currencies should trade in line with EUR, while AxJ aims to weaken against JPY or CNY. Post Fed, however, there is scope for deflation to remain on the radar. Deviation from Inflation Target The Deflation Theme Persists Deflation has worsened, but lowflationary currencies have not been the underperformers. 4 Inflation falling but above target IDR 3 2 BRL Inflation rising and above target TRY PEN 1 0 INR ZAR CLP COP MXN AUD NOK NZD CAD USD CNY GBP TWD -2 JPY RON CZK SEK PHP EUR KRW -3 THB ILS CHF PLN SGD -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 Inflation falling and 1Y Change in Inflation below target -1 2 3 Inflation rising but below target Source: Haver Analytics, Morgan Stanley Research, Bloomberg. RUB removed from chart because it is an outlier. Exhibit 2 We like holding low-cost lowflation trades which we believe could pay off over a longer time horizon. We remain long JPY/KRW, USD/THB, and USD/ILS. Core Inflation Has Fallen Too 3.0 2.0 Though the deflation theme has played out, the currencies that have underperformed since then have not been the lowflation currencies, but rather, high-carry currencies with external vulnerabilities. As we approach the first rate hike, we expect this environment to continue, and expect lowflation to be a regional story, with European currencies trying to keep pace with EUR as AxJ currencies aim to improve competiveness versus JPY and CNY. We await a catalyst for these lowflationary currencies to catch up. Without such a catalyst, markets are likely to focus on the first Fed hike, boosting volatility and weakening high-carry currencies with external vulnerabilities. However, the lowflation theme could persist beyond the first hike. Low-cost trades associated with the lowflation theme could outperform over a longer time horizon. For this reason, we stick to our long USD/ILS, USD/THB, and JPY/KRW positions. 1.0 0.0 -1.0 -2.0 Change in Inflation Change in Core Inflation -3.0 -4.0 MYR INR THB PLN ILS ZAR GBP PHP IDR MXN HUF SGD PEN USD EUR AUD NZD CHF CNY KRW TRY CZK CAD NOK SEK JPY CLP BRL COP In November, we presented a framework to help investors consider which currencies could become vulnerable should global disinflationary forces intensify (see FX Pulse: Deflation Risks & Currency Conflict (20 Nov 2014)). Since then, inflation has continued to fall across the board. In November, there were 16 countries where the inflation rate was higher than it had been a year ago; today, there are five (RUB, BRL, CLP, COP, and SEK – see Exhibit 1). Source: Haver Analytics, Morgan Stanley Research. We use headline core inflation or inflation excluding energy and food if possible. Deflation Yes, but Depreciation? Clearly, the theme has played out and deflation has worsened over recent months, even if we are now starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel in some regions – Europe in particular has shown glimmers of reflation. Falling commodity prices have exacerbated lowflation, but core inflation in many countries has fallen as well (see Exhibit 2). When we highlighted this theme in November, we argued it would drive currency depreciation in many countries that are vulnerable to falling prices. Looking at Exhibit 3, lowflation currencies have weakened, as we expected. However, for the most part, these have not been the biggest losers. Instead, looking at Exhibit 3, the largest declines were seen in high-carry, externally-vulnerable 6 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse currencies (BRL, RUB, TRY) and commodity exporters (COP, RUB, CAD, MXN, MYR). Many of these countries actually happen to be in the small camp of highflation currencies. Currencies which also trade more naturally on EUR crosses also depreciated significantly, in line with the EUR weakness. environment to shift, with volatility higher and investors less willing to take on carry trades. This could lead to a drying up of capital flow into these currencies, likely to be exacerbated in regions reliant upon external funding. Exhibit 4 High-Beta Currencies Have Been the Weakest Exhibit 3 TWI and REER Performance Since December 10% 0.4 3m Beta to S&P Jun13-Jun14 Average Beta 0.2 0.0 5% -0.2 -0.4 0% -0.6 -5% -10% -0.8 REER TWI -1.0 MXN ZAR BRL INR HUF TRY CLP RUB AUD NZD NOK PLN MYR SEK IDR CAD COP KRW EUR CZK RON PEN THB PHP GBP TWD CHF ILS JPY -1.2 BRL COP RUB TRY CAD MXN MYR EUR NOK CZK AUD IDR PLN SEK SGD ZAR HUF PEN JPY TWD CLP NZD GBP KRW CNY INR THB ILS CHF USD -15% Source: Morgan Stanley Research, Bloomberg. Average of Rolling 12 m beta over the time period. Source: BIS, Haver Analytics, Morgan Stanley Research, Bloomberg Exhibit 5 st Finally, as we approach the first rate hike, the divergence between tightening in the US and easing almost everywhere else drove large currency moves that in turn amplified FX volatility (see Exhibit 5). This has challenged currencies with external vulnerabilities, which tend to be the highflationary, high-carry currencies. These currencies have done well in an environment of ample liquidity from the commodity supercycle and QE. As the Fed begins to tighten policy, we expect the 19 17 M1KE 5 FXVIX (RHS, Inverted) 6 7 15 8 13 Mar-15 Jan-15 Feb-15 Dec-14 Nov-14 Oct-14 12 Sep-14 5 Aug-14 11 Jul-14 7 Jun-14 10 May-14 9 Apr-14 9 Mar-14 11 Jan-14 The natural question is: why haven’t deflationary currencies been the biggest underperformers? The answer to this has several elements. The first is that the deflation theme did actually play out, most notably with the introduction of ECB QE. This drove a decline in EUR against USD that dragged most lowflation European currencies with it (see The Global Macro Analyst: The Dollar Tantrum (25 Mar 2015)). The USD rally that this prompted in turn drove an underperformance of high-beta currencies, which, by definition, tend to have the largest moves in times of large directional shifts. These currencies also tend to be high risk, and high carry. The second reason is simply that commodities have continued to sell off, exacerbating vulnerabilities in many already high-beta currencies such as RUB, and raising the sensitivity of some traditionally low-beta currencies such as COP (see Exhibit 4.) FX Volatility Has Risen as Months to 1 Hike Fall Feb-14 Evaluating the Deflation Framework Source: Morgan Stanley Research, Bloomberg Will Lowflationary Currencies Catch Up? The truth is, as we approach the first Fed hike, the focus is likely to remain on currencies perceived as vulnerable to external funding squeezes. Data weakness and a dovish Fed have driven markets to push back the timing of the first hike somewhat, offering relief to these currencies amidst a USD pause (see FX Pulse: Fed Flexibility = USD Volatility (19 Mar 2015)) but a combination of expected improvement in US data as we move out of winter and the simple passage of time towards the first hike should drive further USD strength. What’s more, the Fed’s data dependent approach is likely to 7 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse raise volatility even further. In this environment, it is actually the high-beta, highflation, high-carry currencies which could be the biggest underperformers against USD as we have already seen – ZAR, TRY, RUB, and BRL in particular come to mind – for the reasons mentioned above. Play Deflation via Regional Crosses Without a catalyst for strong central bank reaction in the lowflation currencies, higher-beta, externally-vulnerable currencies are likely to underperform so long as volatility rises in the run up to the first rate hike. During this time period, we think the deflation theme may be best played as a regional relative value trade. CEEMEA and AxJ have been most susceptible to the deflation theme, partially because they have imported deflation from their major trading partners, as we argued in November. AxJ (and some CEEMEA) have very high trade exposure as a share of GDP, while in CEEMEA and some G10 European countries (CHF, SEK) trade is particularly focused on the Euro Area, rather than a diverse set of countries. This renders FX depreciation one of the most effective ways to combat deflation (see CEE Economics: Deflation Is Here – What Can Policy Do? (27 Jan 2015)). This is particularly true in places where scope for traditional easing via policy rates is limited and debt levels are high, as we discussed in November (see Economics & Strategy Insights: Korea: Household Debt Concerns Could Mean More FX Policy (09 Feb 2015)).. However, given the particular regional focus for these currencies, they may focus on EUR or JPY crosses, rather than a TWI subsection. Exhibit 6 Trade with Certain Regions (% of GDP) 120 100 Japan China Euro Area 80 60 40 20 EUR ARS CNY USD INR BRL CAD COP JPY MXN VEF IDR PEN ILS NZD AUD PHP TRY ZAR RUB GBP NOK CLP KRW SEK THB RON CHF MYR PLN SGD HUF CZK 0 Source: Haver Analytics, Morgan Stanley Research, Reflation Not a Cure All for Europe Currencies with a focus on EUR, such as HUF, PLN, CHF, and SEK are likely to see their currencies trade within a band against EUR. As EUR depreciates against USD, particularly in the second half of the year as the time to the first rate hike declines, this implies depreciation in the currencies above against USD, but this is unlikely to greatly differ from EURUSD performance. This is in line with what we’ve seen thus far. For these currencies to be the underperformers against USD, EUR must become the worst performer against the greenback. This is true even in countries where we see signs of reflation. Sweden is the most notable example of this, though we also expect inflation to pick up in much of CEE (see CEEMEA Compass (Respite, Reflation, Restructuring) (20 Mar 2015)). However, reflation is only likely to take hold if meaningful currency appreciation against major trading partners is avoided. It is for this reason that the Riksbank surprised markets by easing, despite hitting a bottom in inflation – the central bank explicitly cited foreign exchange risks (Sweden Economics: Riksbank: Cutting Further, Buying More (18 Mar 2015)). While not our base case, currency appreciation could prompt this kind of reaction in other areas should appreciation become a risk to inflation. USD/AxJ: Slow Burn Higher In AxJ, we think central banks may eventually play catch up to combat rising deflation (see Asia Pacific Economics: Are Asian Central Banks Embracing Deflation Risks? (24 Feb 2015)). The question is what will drive this catch up. Central banks in the region thus far have been reluctant to cut. Core inflation in the region has come down on the whole, but as seen in Exhibit 2, there are many individual AxJ countries that have not seen core prices fall yet. As a result, central banks may be hoping that lowflation passes. In addition, high household debt in many Asian countries raises the stakes on rate cuts as it risks fuelling asset bubbles. However, as export growth weakens, central banks may be tempted to cut rates in order to target both growth and inflation (see Asia/Pacific Economics: Why Asian Exports Are Stagnating (10 Mar 2015)). In this light, weak growth could be the catalyst for AxJ to play catch up. At the very least, central banks could lean against the wind on their FX as a means of combatting deflationary pressures. This is a particularly useful tool in countries where household debt is high. Without a deterioration in growth, deflation may not be enough to make it outperform moves in USD/EM, at least for now. We see three reasons for this. First, USD/AxJ is typically lower beta, and therefore, could underperform in the run-up to the first rate hike. Second, AxJ still runs a current account surplus, and these inflows provide a natural boost to 8 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse the currency if not offset by capital outflows. Finally, the main trading partners and competitors for most Asian currencies are JPY and CNY. We expect both of these currencies to be relatively stable over the next few months. In Japan, reflation and rising wages are likely to keep the BoJ on hold and JPY relatively stable. In China, there is some scope for near-term depreciation, but a full-scale devaluation is unlikely (see Strategy and Economics: Global Insight: Will the PBOC Devalue the CNY? (05 Mar 2015)). As a result, policymakers in AxJ may aim for devaluation against JPY or CNY. We hold our long USD/THB and long JPY/KRW positions against this backdrop. Lowflationary Low-Beta Currencies Pay Off Later However, we think the deflation theme is one that can persist beyond the first Fed hike. While high-beta currencies could see weakness front loaded as we approach the first hike, we believe the deflation theme could persist even after the Fed moves rates. Our work has found that USD tends to appreciate most before the first hike (see FX Pulse: Fed Tightening Cycles and USD (12 Mar 2015)). What’s more, central banks may be holding out hope that the Fed hike will do their work for them, via the USD appreciation. Should they be disappointed after the first Fed hike, they may be forced to take matters into their own hands and ease policy in order to add to currency depreciation. 9 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Technical Chart of the Week – JPY/KRW Sheena Shah Long-term JPY/KRW Chart 3 5 16.50 15.50 14.50 13.50 12.50 11.50 10.50 9.50 8.50 7.50 6.50 16.3430 15.7578 c e= B 2 a 1 d 4 4 b A 3 1 9.0613 5 =C 2 05RSI 06 07 08 09 10 11 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 JPY/KRW has completed a Cwave move down, which we believe is about to turn around and so we recommend bullish positions. A full 5-wave structure formed from a low of 7.4453 in 2007 and its retracement is more than complete, going beyond the 76.4% retracement level around 9.56. There is bullish divergence being shown in the RSI, supporting a turnaround. 10 12 13 14 15 2-year JPY/KRW Chart 12.50 4 12.00 (2) 11.50 2 11.00 a (1) 1 10.50 4 c 3 10.00 5= (3) e=(4) 10.0886 b 9.50 d 9.00 RSI Mar-13 Jun-13 Sep-13 Dec-13 Mar-14 Jun-14 Sep-14 (5)= 5 = C Dec-14 Mar-15 5 Mar-13 Jun-13 Sep-13 Dec-13 Mar-14 Jun-14 Sep-14 Dec-14 The sub-structure presented in the 2-year JPY/KRW chart is open to interpretation, but we believe that the low of 9.1553 is a bottoming out of the structure, indicating upside from here. The risk to the view is a move below this low; therefore, we put a stop just below it at 9.00. A move below 9.1553 suggests that the 5-wave structures are not complete yet. Mar-15 90-day JPY/KRW Chart 10.20 (4) 10.00 9.80 – target on long position 9.80 10 2 9.6010 10 4 1 9.40 10 1 9.20 9 2 3 9 9.0613 5 5 9.00 – stop on long position 9.00 9 1RSI76 151 226 301 376 451 526 601 676 751 826 901 976 105111261201127613511426 9 9 15 8 070Oct 14 300Oct 14 210Nov 14 150Dec 14 070Jan 15 290Jan 15 20 0Feb 15 16 0Mar 15 JPYKRW has been creating a zig-zag structure within a flat channel. A move above the recent high around 9.46 opens the way to further upside, in our view. The risk we see is that JPYKRW continues to trade flat within this channel. x 10000 For a description of the Elliott Wave Theory, see Trading Technicals – The Elliott Wave Method, January 10, 2014. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research 10 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendations Evan Brown, Vandit D. Shah EURNOK Entered: 8.62; Close: New York End-of-Day USDNOK Entry: 7.48; Target; 8.30; Stop: 7.32 05-Mar-15 Hold: Long USD/ILS Enter: 3.99; Target: 4.25; Stop: 3.90 105 -20 -30 100 Oil Sector Investment (YoY) Projected to decline -40 95 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Korea Fighting Disinflationary Forces Growth Stronger in Chile than Colombia 20% 100% CLP-COP Manufacturing Growth (YoY) CLP-COP Export Growth (YoY, RHS) 15% 80% 60% 10% 40% 5% 20% 0% 0% -20% -5% -40% -10% -60% 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 -100% 2008 -80% -20% 2007 -15% 2006 Hold: Long CLP/COP Both CLP and COP have seen a significant amount of currency depreciation over the past six months, but this has resulted in very different outcomes. In Chile, depreciation has generated a boost in exports and domestic demand, while in Colombia, despite the large depreciation, non-oil exports are soft and the manufacturing sector continues to waver. We see relative value in being long CLP/COP. For more, see EM FX Trades: Buy CLP/COP (09 Mar 2015). 110 -10 2005 Enter: 4.10; Target: 4.28; Stop: 4.08 115 0 2004 05-Mar-15 120 10 2003 Hold: Long JPY/KRW Our economists expect wages to rise in Japan with the cyclical recovery well under way (see Video: Japan Economics: J-Insight: Faster: Cyclical and Structural Reasons for the Acceleration of Wages (16 Mar 2015)). Indeed, wages have already reached the highest growth rate since 1998 (on a 12mma basis). Meanwhile, Korea is still battling deflationary pressures. Weakness in the EUR has also resulted in further unwanted KRW REER appreciation dampening the macro outlook. For more, see EM FX Trades: Long JPY/KRW (16 Mar 2015). 125 20 2002 Enter: 9.28; Target: 9.80; Stop: 9.00 130 NOK trade weighted index (rhs) 30 2001 12-Mar-15 40 2000 Close: Long EUR/NOK Limit Order: Buy USD/NOK We have decided to close our current long EURNOK position as we believe the EURUSD corrective rebound is approaching its end. Despite near-term political uncertainty adding risk premium to oil, we remain bearish on the broader Norwegian economy and look for a dip to buy USD/NOK. We continue to see the second round effects of the 50% decline in oil prices bleeding into wage growth expectations (Norges Bank: Falling Behind the Curve (19 March 2015). Norway requires a weaker currency to improve competitiveness in the non-oil economy. Our economists expect two more 25 bps cuts in May and June, which is an earlier easing than the market anticipates. The key risk to this trade is a more prolonged increase in the price of oil, which would alleviate some pressure on Norway’s economy. Norway Energy Investment to Get Worse Before It Gets Better BoI Steps Up Interventions Although the Bank of Israel disappointed expectations in the market for more easing, we believe that ILS should weaken over the medium term given the focus that the BoI has placed on the currency. Recent data show that the BoI is intervening more aggressively to manage the ILS TWI weaker. Should the BoI be successful in steering market expectations for more ILS weakness, it is likely that the correlation between EUR/USD and USD/ILS will reassert itself. This correlation is based on the premise that the BoI targets the ILS TWI in which the EUR holds the highest single weighting. As such, further declines in EUR/USD will require more significant policy-driven moves higher in USD/ILS for the ILS TWI to not appreciate. 11 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse 29-Jan-15 Enter: 32.78; Target: 35.00; Stop: 32.00 Hold: Long USD/THB The battle against lowflation fought by global central banks is in full swing with the BoT’s rate cut last week adding to easing measures by 20 other central banks this year. Our ASEAN economics team thinks Thailand has the most negative economic outlook within the region (See Thailand Strategy & Economics: Most Vulnerable in ASEAN (March 25, 2015). As such, 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 monetary action. For more, see EM FX Trades: Long USD/THB (29 Jan 2015). 23-Feb-15 Enter: 2.4600; Take Profit: 2.555 Close: Long USD/TRY 12-Feb-15 Close: Long USD/PEN 12-Feb-15 Close: Short EUR/INR THB REER Has Appreciated Sharply Past CBT Easing Cycles We took profit on our long USD/TRY, having broadly pared back risk against high-yielders tactically in the current environment. In the medium term, however, risks surrounding US yields and CBT monetary policy keep us bullish on the pair. On domestic monetary policy, we think further easing will fuel concerns on declining real yields leaving TRY vulnerable to the external environment; however, even if the CBT takes a more prudent course, TRY gains will be limited given ongoing commentary from some public officials on the need for faster rate cuts. Enter: 3.0690; Stopped: 3.0690 Peru REER Elevated; Trade Balance Down We were stopped out of our long USD/PEN position on the dovish Fed and rebound in commodity prices. Over the medium term, Peru’s REER has room to adjust lower compared to Chile and other currencies in LatAm. As such, we may look to re-establish in coming weeks. For more, see Video | LatAm FX: Not There Yet (12 Mar 2015). Enter: 71.05; Take Profit: 68.00 Macro Outlook Improving in India We have taken profit on our short EUR/INR position and will look for levels to re-establish in the coming weeks. 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. Post-the budget and another surprise RBI rate cut, we maintain our stance on long INR positions as being a good way to pick up carry, with recent parliamentary acts on raising FDI limits further supportive. In contrast, we stay negative on EUR over the medium-term on yield compression, reserve diversification and political uncertainty. Increased bank lending and FX hedging only lead to further EUR weakness. Source for all charts: Bloomberg, Haver Analytics, Macrobond, Reuters EcoWin, Morgan Stanley Research 12 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Strategic FX Portfolio Trade Recommendation Notional Nominal Weight Entry Date Entry Level Current Stop Target Spot P&L Carry P&L Portfolio Contribution Closed Trades Long USD/PEN $10.0mn 9.7% 12-Feb-15 3.0690 Stopped at 3.0690 on 24-Mar-15 $0.0k -$70.4k -$70.4k Long USD/TRY $10.0mn 9.7% 23-Feb-15 2.4600 Took profit at 2.5550 on 23-Mar-15 $371.8k -$79.1k $292.7k Short EUR/INR $10.0mn 9.7% 12-Feb-15 71.05 Took profit at 68.00 on 23-Mar-15 $429.8k $84.1k $514.0k Long EUR/NOK $10.0mn 9.7% 19-Mar-15 8.62 Close at NY Close on 26-Mar-15 -$19.4k -$2.3k -$21.8k Long USD/THB $10.0mn 9.7% 29-Jan-15 32.78 32.53 32.00 35.00 -$76.9k -$50.0k -$126.8k Long USD/ILS $10.0mn 9.7% 5-Mar-15 3.9940 3.9561 3.9000 4.2500 -$95.8k $0.6k -$95.2k Long CLP/COP $10.0mn 9.7% 5-Mar-15 4.10 4.12 4.08 4.28 $32.4k -$7.3k $25.1k Long JPY/KRW $10.0mn 9.7% 12-Mar-15 9.28 9.28 9.00 9.80 -$12.9k -$5.0k -$17.9k 7.48 7.88 7.32 8.30 $53.4mn 51.8% Active Trades Lim it Trades Buy USD/NOK Cash Portfolio Mark to Market $103.1mn 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 (26 Mar 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). Sim ulated Managed Account Monthly Gross Perform ance - % 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 0.88 3.18% 13 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Click here for interactive currency pages: G10 Currency Summary Dara Blume and Sheena Shah USD Taking a Breath 12.0% US data remain soft as a result of seasonal factors and labor issues. On top of this, the Fed did not sound in a huge rush to hike rates at the latest meeting. This combination could lead to a USD pause ahead of payrolls. Over this timeframe, we prefer to play relative value trades and wait for dips in USD. However, we expect that growth will pick up and the Fed will hike, so we retain our medium-term bullish USD view, and would use dips to re-establish longer-term long USD positions. EUR Remain Bearish -11.2% Bullish Bearish Watch: GDP, PCE, Consumer Confidence, ADP, ISM, Trade, Payrolls Watch: Consumer Confidence, CPI, PMI We remain bearish on EURUSD and believe that it may begin to head lower after its brief pause following the FOMC meeting. Concerns about Greece remain and the latest round of European elections suggests a more fragmented political landscape, which could be reflected in the outcome of national elections in many countries at the end of the year. Political uncertainty is likely to weigh on EUR. JPY A Brighter Picture - 0.2% We believe that USDJPY has scope to head lower in the near term. First, risk appetite has weakened due to political tension in the Middle East and valuation in equity markets. Second, we are seeing signs of reflation in Japan. Wages are picking up and the economy is strengthening somewhat. The combination of these two factors should pressure USDJPY somewhat, with JPY particularly attractive on the crosses. GBP CPI at 0.0%Y, Remain Bearish - 3.9% Over the coming week we continue to monitor EURGBP, expecting a technical correction higher. This is supported by low risk appetite causing investors to reduce inflows into the UK, keeping the currency weak. With CPI reaching a low of 0.0%Y, there is now an increasing risk that the UK dips into deflation in the coming months. While this supported retail sales, there could be a shift in sentiment from the BoE, supporting the view to sell GBPUSD on rebounds. Political risks also remain. CHF Longer-Term CHF Weakness - 1.2% CHF has gained support relative to EUR in recent days, dropping below the 1.05 area. This could be around a level which the SNB believes that the stronger currency could have a larger deflationary impact on the economy and therefore may come in to intervene. Indeed, recent sight deposit data suggest that the SNB has not been in the market for weeks but this is because CHF was weakening in its favor. We remain buyers of USDCHF on dips. CAD Watching Oil Neutral Watch: Wages, GDP, Manufacturing PMI CAD is gaining some support from stronger oil prices, but we believe that this could be limited over the longer term. The REER still requires adjustment in order to make the economy more competitive. While the dependence on the oil sector is lower than in Norway, CAD could still get hit from a weaker banking sector affected by loans made to the oil sector. We do note that Canada should benefit from growth in the US economy, but look for larger dips to buy USDCAD. 9.9% Bullish Bearish Bearish Watch: Industrial Production, Cash Earnings, Tankan Watch: House Prices, Mortgage Approvals, GDP (F), PMI Manufacturing Watch: KOF, PMI Manufacturing, Risk Appetite AUD Temporary Relief - 4.3% We remain bearish AUD over the medium term but recognize that the USD pause could provide some support to higheryielding currencies such as AUD. It may also offer a moment of relief for Asia, which would further support AUD. However, over the medium term, we remain bearish. Our commodities team lowered its iron ore forecasts recently, not boding well for the longer-term outlook for AUD. NZD A Tactical Rebound - 5.5% We see scope for NZD to head higher in the near term, given the temporary USD pause and some optimism on milk prices. That said, NZD has encountered resistance around its 100 DMA, and for it to take another leg higher, it would need to break meaningfully through this level. Even then, gains would likely be tactical, as we remain bearish over the medium term. SEK Riksbank Puts Verbal Limit on EURSEK 10.9% SEK could gain some mild support on the back of rising inflation expectations in the euro area, but we still expect the Riksbank to object to excessive currency strength, and therefore believe that EURSEK could have a “verbal” floor around 9.00, with the central bank providing more easing via a rate cut or QE if EURSEK moves rapidly below here. EURSEK will likely stay range-bound in the coming weeks, in our view. NOK Watching Oil Prices 7.4% Bearish Neutral Bearish Bearish Watch: Private Sector Credit, Building Approvals, Trade Watch: Building Permits, Business Confidence, M3 Watch: Retail Sales, Manufacturing PMI Watch: Retail Sales, Norges Bank Daily FX Purchases, Manufact. PMI Our longer-term outlook remains bearish on NOK but, in the coming week, given rising political risks, NOK could gain support from rebounding oil prices. However, the economy is still too dependent on oil, and with investment in the industry expected to put pressure on the growth outlook and a central bank expected to cut rates in coming months, there remain large downside risks for NOK. This week we will be watching to see if Norges Bank increases its daily NOK purchases. Charts show 3M performance against USD, as normally quoted and DXY for USD. Click on any currency for a reference webpage on Matrix. 14 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse EM Currency Summary Jessica Liang (AXJ), Meena Bassily (CEEMEA), Felipe Hernandez and Dara Blume (LatAm) -0.7% CNY Neutral INR Neutral IDR Bearish 0.7% 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. 0.7% We remain structurally bearish on IDR. We think that REER adjustments and sustainability of bond inflows will be the key to the outlook for IDR in 2015. For Indonesia to regain competitiveness, REER adjustment will be needed. - 0.2% Declining inflation, weak exports and sluggish domestic growth has led BoK to lower rates to an all-time low of 1.75%. Rising volatility and expectation of Fed tightening will likely cap foreign bond inflows, while slowing growth will keep equity inflows muted. We see USD/KRW climbing higher for the rest of the year. 0.5% 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. In the near term, USD/MYR will continue to track moves in oil prices. 1.0% 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. 0.1% Given the sharp decline in inflation, we see room for one more rate cut from the BoT this year. Aggressive monetary easing by BoJ and ECB has caused THB REER to appreciate to all-time highs, jeopardizing Thailand’s export competitiveness. We remain long USD/THB. EUR/CZK has continued to narrow the gap to the floor at 27. We think it is far too early to expect the CNB to remove the floor which they have said will stay in place well into 2016. As such we see good risk-reward adding long EUR/CZK positions close to the floor. HUF has traded well in line with recent improvement in EM sentiment. We are more cautious on the medium term given the risk of higher bond market volatility driven by Fed risks as we approach the timing of the first rate hike, which can cause large spikes higher in EUR/HUF. We also expect further NBH easing. Although the BoI didn’t cut rates at the last meeting, it has continued to buy USD in line with its clear objective to have a more competitive currency. With inflation falling we expect interventions to increase, and see an increased risk of more non-conventional measures. As such, we stay long USD/ILS with a target at 4.25. The PLN is likely to stay strong until the NBP signals a greater concern over the threat it could pose to the inflation or growth outlook. We think we are still some way from this level. However we are cautious of building long PLN positions in light of potential bond market volatility related to FOMC policy. The CBR has continued to ease policy, however higher oil prices have allowed for RUB to perform more resiliently. Still, with inflation near 17%Y and rising - real policy rates and real carry is now in negative territory, therefore we see poor risk-adjusted returns on RUB. There has been an improvement in the risks surrounding monetary policy, with the CBT having kept rates on hold and there being a clear reduction in political commentary on interest rates. This removes some of the idiosyncratic risks for the TRY; however, sensitivity to US rates remains high given Turkey’s high external financing needs. ZAR remains sensitive to Fed policy and rising UST yields. Trade and manufacturing data have remained poor in South Africa, keeping the current account deficit wide; therefore external funding costs remain important, particularly since FDI flows have been weak in the most recent data. Despite the large moves in BRL seen thus far, we see scope for further weakness. BRL’s sell off has been due to idiosyncratic concerns about Brazil, not simply the USD rally. Volatility remains very high in Brazil, which is eroding support from the carry. We see scope for outperformance from CLP as fundamentals have improved. CLP began its adjustment before many other LatAm currencies, and as such, currency weakness and monetary accommodation have had more time to boost growth. The latest rebound in oil prices could offer support to COP, and if it continues COP could trade strong. However, we note that over the medium term, COP does need to correct to adjust for the second round effects of oil weakness already seen. Note that COP sold off recently even on days when oil picked up, highlighting this. We remain constructive on MXN over the medium term. With the USD pause, MXN should be a relative outperformer as it has the tailwinds of central bank intervention and rising oil prices. That said, once the USD rally resumes, MXN could underperform given its high beta status and use as a proxy for the rest of EM. On a REER basis, PEN looks rich relative to historical levels and lower terms of trade. Decelerating economic activity, particularly in non-commodity tradable sectors, and eroding trade and current account results are also consistent with other evidence that the currency needs to depreciate to help push a necessary macro rebalancing. KRW Bearish MYR Neutral PHP Neutral THB Bearish CZK Neutral HUF Bearish ILS Bearish PLN Neutral RUB Neutral TRY Bearish ZAR Bearish BRL Neutral CLP Neutral COP Bearish 4.1% 2.2% 0.0% 2.1% - 9.3% 5.5% 4.3% 13.3% 0.1% 2.5% 1.1% MXN Bullish - 0.4% PEN Bearish Despite the domestic growth slowdown, we expect the PBoC to manage excess volatility in RMB. Looking ahead, we anticipate a stable path for CNY. Charts show 1M performance against USD, as normally quoted 15 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Global Event Risk Calendar Charles Rubenfeld Date Day 27-Mar Fri 29-Mar Sun 30-Mar Mon 31-Mar 01-Apr Time (Ldn) Ccy Event 08:45 09:00 09:00 N/A 08:30 10:30 12:30 14:00 19:45 GBP NOK NOK NOK SEK SEK USD USD USD BoE's Carney spks (Frankfurt) Retail Sales (MoM) Unemployment Rate Norges Bank's Olsen spks (New York) Retail Sales (MoM) Riksbank's Ingves spks (Frankfurt) GDP (QoQ) Univ. of Michigan Confidence Fed's Yellen (voter) spks (San Francisco, CA) 19:00 EUR Second Round of French Departmental Elections 23:30 13:30 08:00 08:00 N/A 10:00 13:00 09:30 00:50 13:30 13:30 13:30 15:00 15:30 AUD CAD CHF CHF CLP EUR EUR GBP JPY USD USD USD USD USD Consumer Confidence Industrial Product Price (MoM) KOF Leading Indicator SNB Sight Deposits Central Bank 1Q monetary policy report (IPOM) Consumer Confidence German CPI (YoY) Mortgage Approvals Industrial Production (MoM) Personal Income Personal Spending PCE Core (YoY) Pending Home Sales (MoM) Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity 01:30 N/A 13:30 13:30 10:00 10:00 00:05 09:30 09:30 02:30 03:00 N/A 14:00 14:45 15:00 AUD BRL CAD CAD EUR EUR GBP GBP GBP JPY NZD RON USD USD USD Private Sector Credit (MoM) Central Bank Quarterly Inflation Report Average Weekly Earnings (YoY) GDP (MoM) Unemployment Rate CPI Estimate (YoY) GfK Consumer Confidence Current Account Balance GDP (QoQ) Labor Cash Earnings (YoY) M3 (YoY) BNR Rates Decision S&P/CaseShiller Home Price Index Chicago PMI Consumer Confidence Index 01:30 06:30 14:30 08:30 02:00 02:45 09:00 09:30 00:50 08:00 N/A 07:30 13:00 13:15 15:00 15:00 N/A AUD AUD CAD CHF CNY CNY EUR GBP JPY NOK NZD SEK USD USD USD USD USD Building Approvals (MoM) Commodity Index (YoY) PMI Manufacturing Manufacturing PMI Manufacturing PMI PMI Manufacturing PMI Manufacturing PMI Manufacturing Tankan Large Manufacturing Index Manufacturing PMI Global Dairy Trade Announces Milk Auction Results Manufacturing PMI Fed's Yellen (voter) spks (Washington D.C) ADP Employment Change Construction Spending (MoM) ISM Manufacturing Total Vehicle Sales Ref. Period MS forecast Market Previous Feb Mar 0.5% 3% -0.7% 3% Feb 0.25% 1.16% 2.4% 92 2.2% 91.2 0.5% 111.4 -0.4% 90.1 4Q T Mar F 2.2% Feb Mar Mar F Mar P Feb Feb P Feb Feb Feb Feb Mar 0.2% 0.3% 0.3% 0.2% 0.7% -9.5 -3.7% 0.1% 60.786 3.7% 0.3% -0.2% 1.3% 1.68% -11.2 Tue Feb 0.6% Jan Jan Feb Mar Mar 4Q 4Q F Feb Feb 2% 0.3% 11.2% -0.3% 1 -27.008 0.5% 1.3% 6.2% 2.25% 173.02 45.8 96.4 Jan Mar Mar 2% 2% 96 52.4 96.25 Wed Feb Mar Mar Mar Mar Mar F Mar F Mar 1Q Mar 14 Mar Mar Feb Mar Mar 7.9% -20.6% 48.7 47.3 49.9 49.2 51.9 54.1 12 51.2 53.3 -.7% 52.2 225k 0% 52.5 16.65m 211.8k -1.1% 52.9 16.16m 16 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Date 02-Apr 03-Apr 06-Apr 07-Apr 08-Apr 09-Apr 10-Apr 15-Apr 15-Apr 29-Apr 29-Apr 29-Apr 07-May 18-Jun Day Thu Time (Ldn) 01:30 13:30 09:30 13:30 13:30 15:00 Ccy Event Ref. Period Feb Feb Mar MS forecast AUD CAD GBP USD USD USD Trade Balance Trade Balance PMI Construction Initial Jobless Claims Trade Balance Factory Orders Feb Feb -41.5B 02:45 07:30 13:30 13:30 CNY SEK USD USD PMI Composite PMI Services Change in Nonfarm Payrolls Unemployment Rate Mar Mar Mar Mar 15:00 12:30 06:00 15:00 15:00 CAD CLP JPY USD USD Ivey PMI Central Bank Meeting Minutes Leading Index CI Labor Market Conditions Index ISM Non-Manufacturing Composite Mar 49.7 Feb P Mar Mar 105.5 4% 56.9 02:30 05:30 08:00 09:00 09:30 06:30 07:30 08:30 15:00 15:00 AUD AUD CHF EUR GBP INR SEK SEK USD USD Retail Sales (MoM) RBA Rates Decision SNB Sight Deposits PMI Services PMI Services RBI Rates Decision PMI Services Industrial Production (MoM) IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism JOLTs Job Openings 00:30 08:15 10:00 00:01 00:50 04:00 N/A N/A 19:00 AUD CHF EUR GBP JPY JPY JPY JPY USD Consumer Confidence CPI (YoY) Retail Sales (MoM) BRC Shop Price Index (YoY) Trade Balance BoP Basis BoJ Press Conference BoJ Rates Decision Eco Watchers Survey Outlook FOMC Minutes 13:30 09:30 12:00 N/A 15:00 08:30 13:30 15:00 CAD GBP GBP KRW MXN SEK USD USD Building Permits (MoM) Visible Trade Balance GBP/Mn BoE Rates Decision BoK Rates Decision Central Bank Monetary Policy Minutes Household Consumption Initial Jobless Claims Wholesale Inventories (MoM) Feb Feb Feb 1.9 291k 0.3% CAD CAD CAD CHF CNY GBP NOK NOK PEN Housing Starts Unemployment Rate Employment Change Unemployment Rate CPI (YoY) Industrial Production (MoM) Industrial Production (MoM) CPI Underlying (YoY) BCRP Rates Decision Mar Mar Mar Mar Mar Feb Feb Mar Apr 3.25% 156k 6.8% -1k 3.5% 1.4% -0.1% -3% 2.4% 3.25% EUR CAD SEK USD NZD NOK CHF ECB Rates Decision BoC Rates Decision Riksbank Rates Decision FOMC Rate Decision RBNZ Rates Decision Norges Bank Rates Decision SNB Rates Decision Apr Apr Apr Apr Apr May Jun 0.05% 0.75% -0.25% 0.125% 3.50% 1.0% -0.75% Market Previous 290k -41B 0.5% -980m -2.45B 60.1 291k -41.8B -0.2% 250k 5.5% 51.8 56.7 295k 5.5% -1.8B Fri 195k 5.6% Mon Tue Feb 2.25% 2.25% Mar F Mar 0.4% 2.25% Mar Feb Apr Feb 54.3 56.7 7.5% 56.7 0.96% 49.1 5m Mar Feb Mar Feb 111.4 -0.8% 1.1% -1.7% ¥-864.2B 7.5% Wed 0.1% 0.1% Mar 0.1% 53.2 Thu 0.5% 1.75% 0.5% Feb 290k -12.9% £-8412 0.5% 1.75% Fri 13:15 13:30 13:30 06:45 02:30 09:30 09:00 09:00 00:00 Upcoming Risk Events 12:45 15:00 08:30 19:00 22:00 9:00 8:30 0.05% 0.125% 3.50% 0.05% 0.75% -0.25% 0.125% 3.50% 1.25% -0.75% 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 17 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 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 7.0 DXY NZD AUD CAD JPY CHF SEK NOK EUR GBP Monthly 6.0 Weekly 5.0 Mar-13 Jun-13 Sep-13 Dec-13 Mar-14 Jun-14 Sep-14 Dec-14 Mar-15 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 -10 CHF NOK EUR NZD AUD Current SEK JPY CAD USD GBP -3 -4 Last week -5 Mar-14 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research May-14 Jul-14 Sep-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 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) 102 CHF 99 NZD 96 MXN 93 AUD 90 CAD 87 GBP 84 JPY EUR 81 78 Jan-14 -28 -26 -24 -22 -20 -18 -16 -14 -12 -10 -8 Mar-14 May-14 Jul-14 Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research Sep-14 Nov-14 Jan-15 -6 -4 -2 2 Mar-15 Note: Aggregate USD positioning in nominal terms, see appendix for details. Source: Bloomberg, Morgan Stanley Research 18 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 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 USD -2 -2 EUR -1 -1 JPY 4 3 GBP -3 -4 CHF 5 4 CAD -2 -3 AUD 2 2 NZD -4 -4 NOK 4 4 SEK -2 -2 Short Neutral Long -10 -9 -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 MS Flow IMM TFX Beta ETF Sentiment -9 6 -9 4 -2 -2 USD 6 -10 -3 -6 7 0 EUR 9 10 8 -1 5 -4 JPY -10 -5 2 -5 4 -7 GBP 9 4 6 0 CHF -6 -2 4 -4 CAD 9 1 -3 4 -1 AUD -8 -6 -5 1 0 Toshin -1 Since Monday, March 23, positioning in currencies has shifted. The largest shorts are in NZD and GBP. The largest longs are in CHF and JPY. USD long positioning was unchanged. Global macro hedge funds modestly added to longs, but sentiment turned bearish. JPY long positioning was increased. This was driven by buying from global macro hedge funds and a reduction in bearish sentiment. We will provide a full updated report and refresh positioning scores for all of our underlying sub-indicators on Monday. NZD 6 2 NOK -8 5 SEK For methodology, see Appendix. Tactical Rich and Cheap Fair Value Model AUD CAD CHF EUR GBP JPY NOK NZD SEK Spot Fair Value Z-Score 0.78 0.78 0.06 1.26 1.27 1.71 0.98 0.97 -0.05 1.08 1.23 -3.39 1.50 1.51 -3.02 120.04 120.74 0.22 8.02 6.79 -5.24 0.76 0.71 1.99 8.62 7.67 -8.91 TRAC Trade Exp. App. Short -0.01% Short -0.98% Neutral 0.05% Long 13.50% Long 0.67% Neutral -0.58% Long 18.18% Short -6.06% Long 12.36% BRL CLP COP HUF ILS IDR INR KRW MYR MXN PHP PLN RUB SGD THB TRY ZAR Spot Fair Value 3.23 3.39 633 624 2,573 2,409 303 307 4.04 3.73 13,124 13,568 62.47 62.50 1,123 1,096 3.73 3.32 15.06 15.08 44.95 44.27 4.13 4.19 59.29 67.46 1.38 1.37 32.56 32.59 2.57 2.53 12.02 11.44 Z-Score 1.49 -0.69 -1.90 0.74 -3.92 2.22 0.32 -0.65 -3.99 1.12 -1.38 0.94 0.44 -0.41 0.44 -1.60 -2.44 TRAC Trade Exp App Short -4.83% Neutral 1.36% Long 6.81% Short -1.11% Long 8.34% Short -3.27% Short -0.05% Long 2.41% Long 12.37% Short -0.19% Long 1.55% Neutral -1.34% Neutral -12.11% Long 0.32% Short -0.09% Long 1.76% Long 5.09% 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 March 23, 2015. 19 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 26, 2015 FX Pulse Central Bank Watch Next rate Market MS decision expects (bp) expects (bp) US 29 Apr 0 0 Euro Area 15 Apr -2 Japan 08 Apr 0 UK 09 Apr Current Morgan Stanley Forecasts 1Q15 2Q15 3Q15 4Q15 0.125 0.125 0.125 0.125 0.125 0 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.10 0 0 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.50 Canada 15 Apr -5 0 0.75 0.75 0.75 0.75 0.75 Switzerland 18 Jun -10 0 -0.75 -0.75 -0.75 -0.75 -0.75 Sweden 29 Apr -2 0 -0.25 -0.25 -0.25 -0.25 -0.25 Norway 07 May - -25 1.25 1.25 0.75 0.75 0.75 Australia 07 Apr -15 0 2.25 2.25 2.00 1.75 1.75 New Zealand 29 Apr -2 0 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.50 3.50 Russia 30 Apr - -50 14.00 13.00 12.00 11.00 Poland 15 Apr 5 0 14.00 00 1.50 1.50 1.50 1.50 1.50 Czech Rep 07 May -3 0 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 0.05 Hungary 21 Apr -12 -15 1.95 1.95 1.50 1.50 1.50 Romania 31 Mar - -25 2.25 2.00 1.75 1.75 1.75 Turkey 22 Apr - -25 7.50 7.50 7.25 7.25 7.25 Israel 27 Apr -1 0 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.10 0.10 South Africa 21 May 19 0 5.75 5.75 5.75 6.00 6.00 Nigeria 24 Mar - 0 13.00 13.00 14.00 14.00 14.00 Ghana 01 Apr - 0 21.00 21.00 21.00 21.11 20.00 5.35 5.35 5.10 5.10 5.10 7.50 7.50 7.00 6.75 6.50 China - - India 07 Apr Hong Kong S. Korea - - -25 17 Apr - 0 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 09 Apr 0 0 1.75 1.75 1.75 1.75 1.75 Taiwan 24 Jun - 0 1.875 1.875 1.875 1.875 1.875 Indonesia 14 Apr - 0 7.50 7.5 7.25 7 6.75 Malaysia 07 May - -25 3.25 3.25 3 2.75 2.75 Thailand 29 Apr -4 -25 1.75 1.75 1.5 1.5 1.5 Brazil 29 Apr 56 50 12.75 12.75 13.5 13.5 12.5 Mexico 26 Mar 0 0 3 3 3 3 3.5 Chile 16 Apr -4 0 3 3 2.75 2.75 2.75 Peru 09 Apr - 0 3.25 3.25 3 3 3.25 Colombia 24 Apr -1 0 4.5 4.5 4.5 4.5 4.5 Source: National Central Banks, Morgan Stanley Research forecasts as of March 18; Note: Japan policy rate takes a mid-range value. Market expects for G10 as of March 18. EM | What’s In the Price. Green (Red) means MS expects a lower (higher) rate than the market at the next meeting. BRICs Policy Rates G4 Policy Rates US 7 Japan UK Euro Area China 30 Brazil 6 25 Russia 5 India 20 4 15 3 2 10 1 5 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 March 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 1.43 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 1.30 1.25 1.20 1.15 1.10 1.05 1.00 0.95 0.90 0.85 0.80 Jun-12 MS F orecast Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-14 Jun-15 MS F orecast MS F orecast Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 MS F orecast 1150 34 1.30 1050 Jun-15 900 Jun-12 30 29 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 4.25 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 USDZAR EUR/CZK 30 MS F orecast USD/ZAR 14.5 29 13.5 12.5 28 4.15 11.5 27 4.05 10.5 26 3.95 9.5 25 3.85 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 24 Jun-12 8.5 Jun-13 USDBRL USD/BRL 3.70 3.50 3.30 3.10 2.90 2.70 2.50 2.30 2.10 1.90 1.70 Jun-12 28 Jun-12 MS F orecast 4.35 3.75 Jun-12 Jun-15 MS F orecast EURCZK MS F orecast Jun-14 31 EURPLN EUR/PLN 4.45 Jun-13 32 950 Jun-14 MS F orecast 33 1000 1.25 Jun-15 USDTHB USD/THB 36 35 1100 Jun-14 AUDUSD AUD/USD 1.09 1.04 0.99 0.94 0.89 0.84 0.79 0.74 0.69 0.64 Jun-12 1200 1.35 Jun-13 Jun-13 USDKRW USD/KRW 1250 1.40 1.20 Jun-12 MS F orecast USDCAD USDSGD USD/SGD 1.45 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-14 Jun-15 7.5 Jun-12 Jun-13 USDMXN USD/MXN 17.50 MS F orecast Jun-14 Jun-15 USDCLP USD/CLP 710 MS F orecast MS F orecast 16.50 660 15.50 610 14.50 560 13.50 510 12.50 Jun-13 Jun-14 Jun-15 11.50 Jun-12 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 March 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 January 22, 2015. AUDUSD and NZDUSD were updated on February 5, 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 1.10 119 1.49 0.95 8.47 7.78 1.24 0.79 0.76 131 0.74 1.05 9.33 8.57 6.21 7.75 13018 62.7 1108 3.66 44.7 1.36 31.3 32.5 3.2 14.97 8.8 6.3 619 2542 3.1 11.9 2.59 3.94 56.7 4.19 27.8 314 4.41 95.62 102.49 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 0.0 1.6 -8.0 5.1 3.2 9.3 6.3 -6.8 -7.1 1.8 8.7 -0.9 3.7 9.4 -2.1 0.4 0.0 -1.2 7.6 3.8 3.5 0.0 1.6 2.1 -4.0 2.0 9.6 -60.0 3.5 0.0 0.0 1.9 -3.8 1.0 5.2 5.8 1.5 5.2 1.1 3.6 -1.3 -5.2 7.5 -7.5 8.4 7.4 13.3 8.4 -11.2 -12.8 2.0 2.6 2.8 1.9 7.4 -3.5 0.6 -5.0 -5.1 10.8 2.6 3.9 2.0 4.9 3.8 -15.8 -1.1 9.2 122.5 4.1 -0.7 0.0 -0.9 -8.9 5.7 15.2 5.3 2.1 7.4 0.5 6.6 -1.1 Source: Morgan Stanley Research 22 MORGAN STANLEY RESEARCH March 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 March 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. 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