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What's Next for the Swiss Franc?

Jan. 14, 2011 2:33 AM ETFXF, FXE3 Comments
Bruce Krasting profile picture
Bruce Krasting
8.7K Followers

Read the news yesterday and look at the tape and you would have to conclude that all of the problems in the EU have vanished. Germany’s economy is booming, the Chinese are funding Portugal, Spain sells bonds at a cheap price. What’s not to like?

The currency markets have reacted to all the good news. All the short EURUSD positions got blown up (again). The main bellweather for this is the EURCHF cross. It has backed up three big figures since the start of the year.

I write a fair bit about the CHF. I think it does play a pivotal role in the broader markets. But I rarely trade it. I have seen time and again that this pair (EURCHF) hurts players. The problem is that it is a sucker trade. It is too easy to get short at the wrong time and just as easy to get long and be wrong.

When the news flow turns blackest for the EU you sit back and think, “It’s gotta be right to be short!” But then the news flow turns (one bond auction? give me a break) and it’s all bid no offer.

This too will pass. Europe’s problems are not over. Not by a long shot. There is no “soft landing” scenario. The news will turn negative again in the not too distant future. A month or two at best. With the bearish view still intact one would have to conclude that the EURCHF will be a good short again at some point and new lows are in front of us. Should (when) this occur the Swiss will have a big policy problem on their hands. They survived quite well in 2010, even though the key Euro cross fell by 20%. It’s not possible that we could see an additional significant gain for the Franc in 11’ without it

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Bruce Krasting profile picture
8.7K Followers
I've been writing for the professional press for the last five years and have been on the Fox Business channel several times as a guest describing my written work. In January 2009, I started writing my blog Bruce Krasting (http://brucekrasting.blogspot.com). From 1990-1995 I ran a private hedge fund in Greenwich Ct. called Falconer Limited. Investments were driven by macro developments. We expressed our views in global bonds, currencies, stocks, commodities and derivatives. I closed the fund and retired in 1995. I've also been employed by Drexel Burnham Lambert, Citicorp, Credit Suisse and Irving Trust Corp. I hold a bachelor's degree in economics from Ithaca College and currently live in Westchester, NY.

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