It's hardly a secret that German officials are resisting QE and some would argue with good cause.
As the graphic above from Marc Chandler's http://www.marctomarket.com shows, the CRB Index and the euro have been like Siamese twins for a while now. (Yellow line euro, white CRB Index).
Chandler, a well known foreign exchange market analyst, writer and professor, makes some interesting points. This not about, as he notes, a causal relationship.
What we are interested in here is the news today that while the preliminary August euro area headline inflation ticked lower, the core rate actually rose. In our discussions of the lowflation in the euro area, we have emphasized a three considerations.
First, we argued that the disinflation/deflation in the periphery was
the actually a sign that the system (monetary union) monetary union was
working. This can be understood as tantamount to an internal
devaluation. This is the alternative to the external devaluation that
so many economists called for when they argued Greece, or Cyprus, or
Portugal or Italy, or Spain should exit the EMU, devalue, and perhaps,
re-join.
Second, we argued that to the restoration of competitiveness simply requires a EMU member to have lower inflation than Germany. Therein
lies the rub. By Germany have such low inflation itself (preliminary
August estimate of 0.8%), it forces others to risk deflation. German
officials cringe at the idea that it needs to run higher inflation.
Moreover, Germany industrial and government workers have seen higher
wage settlements and a minimum wage has been introduced. Much to the
chagrin of Merkel's critics on her right, the Chancellor has support
other social programs, that her coalition partners, the Social Democrats
endorse.
Third, to the extent that the lowflation is a function of weak
economic growth and high unemployment (though not in Germany), it may
not be amenable to monetary policy. German officials have been
clear in word, and the EU has been clear in deed, that the Stability and
Growth Pact allows for greater fiscal flexibility that has been
explored up until now. This does not only refer to giving countries
more time to meet the 3% deficit target, but also speaks to the
flexibility that the creditor countries, like Germany, are not using.
This seemed to be as much, if not more, of Draghi's message at Jackson
Hole. It is also likely to be the subject of heated debates at the
weekend EU Summit.
The CRB Index put in the low in the middle of last week and has trended higher since.
The 5-day moving average is likely to cross above the 20-day average
for the first time in nearly two months. The combination of the weaker
euro (-3.6% on a trade-weighted basis over the past six months) and a
bounce in the CRB Index could point to a bottom in euro area inflation
in the Sept/Oct period.
Don't think that German officials, both at the central bank and in Berlin, are oblivious to this prospect. It
will give them yet another reason to resist QE. Some observers have
dubbed an ABS purchase scheme as "private QE". While this might
distinguish it from the US and UK, note that the BOJ buys corporate
bonds, commercial paper, REITS and ETFs. Moreover, the Fed and BOE made
their asset purchases in the secondary market, which also gave funds to
private (institutional) investors.
If the bottom in eurozone inflation registers in September/October, as mentioned, QE from the German viewpoint would be entirely unnecessary. So you might want to watch the CRB Index a little more closely.
t. man hatter
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