Euro-pound parity call chimes as Morgan Stanley joins HSBC

epa03035415 (FILE) A file photo dated 20 january 2011 showing a sign at Morgan Stanley office in New York, New York, USA. The US bank Morgan Stanley plans to cut 1,600 jobs next year in the face of a 45-per-cent decline in share value, the news agency Bloomberg reported 15 December 2011. The sixth biggest US bank said the decision to cut 2.6 per cent of a workforce of more than 62,000 employees was a response to Europe's continuing debt crisis and the firm's own revenue decline in the third quarter.  EPA/ANDREW GOMBERT

Bloomberg

What once seemed a highly unlikely call on euro-sterling is gaining momentum, with two of the world’s leading banks predicting that Europe’s shared currency will attain and even go beyond parity with the pound for the first time.
Morgan Stanley sees the pair at 1.02 by the end of March, which represents a 12 percent gain for the euro from current levels, while HSBC Holdings Plc is sticking to its forecast that the euro will trade one-for-one against the pound by year-end. Standard Bank strategist Steve Barrow said “it’s not a huge leap of faith to suggest we could get up to the parity area.” It would be “foolhardy” to rule out the prospect of the euro reaching the one-pound mark, according to Rabobank International’s senior currency analyst Jane Foley.
The euro has surged more than 6 percent against the pound this year amid speculation that the European Central Bank will announce a tapering of bond purchases by autumn. By contrast, the pound is being held down by uncertainty surrounding Brexit negotiations.
“In euro-sterling we’ve had a very strong conviction and it’s one of the biggest forecasts I ever remember making on a major currency,” David Bloom, HSBC’s London-based global head of currency strategy said in an interview last week. That’s “a 20 percent move and that’s quite something.
It’s very unusual that we make such, what was at that time, an outrageous forecast” but “we are roughly half way there and we believe in it,” he said.
Bloom first made his parity call a year ago, when the euro was around 83 pence. HSBC predicts the euro and the pound ending this year at $1.20, which are both “strong views,” he said.
Euro-sterling was little changed at 0.9085 as of 9:20 a.m. in London on Tuesday, having reached 0.9119 on Aug. 11, its strongest level since October. The pair reached a record 0.9803 in December 2008.

Diverging Politics
Since France elected pro-European leader Emmanuel Macron in May, risks of the currency bloc fragmenting have diminished. In addition, euro-region economic data are showing signs of improvement. In contrast, Brexit negotiations are far from clear and that’s weighing on the pound. That’s the main concern for Standard Bank’s Barrow.
It all “depends a lot of how the Brexit negotiations go,” he said. “On euro-sterling previously we thought the 90-92 area might be the peak, but obviously now I no longer do.”
While Morgan Stanley’s parity call is partly due to a bullish-euro outlook, the UK currency is “likely to weaken in its own right, driven by weak economic performance, low real yields and increasing political risks,” Hans Redeker, head of foreign-exchange strategy, wrote in a client note dated Aug. 10.

Minority View
Still, the number of analysts calling for parity in the pair is relatively small. Of the 62 participants in a Bloomberg currency survey, only HSBC and Morgan Stanley see the pair at or above 1.00 by mid-2018.
For ING Groep NV’s Viraj Patel, the recent move higher in the euro versus the pound is more of an “overshoot, rather than a broader trend toward parity.”

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