Friday, August 19, 2011

Swiss Franc & Singapore Dollar Swap Spread Turn Negative

Swiss 2-Year Yields Turn Negative, 10-Year Yield Down the Most Since 1994
Bloomberg, 18-Aug-11
By Keith Jenkins

Swiss two-year note yields stayed negative for a second day after central bankers announced more measures to weaken the franc, showing investors may sacrifice capital for the perceived safety of investment in the currency.

The Swiss two-year note yield fell five basis points to negative 0.06 percent at 4 p.m. in London as stock markets slid around the world. The yield yesterday slid 10 basis points into negative territory, indicating investors will receive less when the bonds mature than the sum they paid for them. Ten-year Swiss yields tumbled 19 basis points today, the most since Bloomberg began collecting the data, to 0.86 percent. (>>>)

Negative swap rate signals Singapore rethink on SGD rise
Reuters, 17-Aug-11
By Kevin Lim

Singapore is attracting an unwelcome flood of U.S. dollars that has caused a key interest rate to turn negative, complicating efforts to dampen inflation and prompting speculation the central bank will tweak its policy to slow the rapid rise in the country's currency.

While Singapore prides itself on having a highly globalised and open economy, the stream of investors seeking refuge from international market turmoil in recent weeks could fuel price pressures on the tiny island, adding to fears of a potential property bubble, even as the economy shows signs of slowing.

That could persuade the city's central bank to reconsider its policy on allowing further appreciation in the local currency. (>>>)