Case File
efta-01461070DOJ Data Set 10OtherEFTA01461070
Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 10
Reference
efta-01461070
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
Extracted Text (OCR)
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Deutsche Bank
Markets Research
Global
Spot
gn Exchange
For ei
Special Report
FX
Dale
9 March 2015
Last year we introduced the Euroglut concept: the idea that the Euro-area's huge current account surplus reflects
a very large pool of excess savings that will have a major impact on global asset prices for the rest of this
decade. Combined with ECB quantitative easing and negative rates we argued that this surplus of savings would
lead to large-scale capital flight from Europe causing a collapse in the euro and exceptionally depressed global
bond yields.
With European portfolio outflows currently running at record highs, this piece now asks: Can outflows
continue? How big will they be? The answer to this question is critical: the greater the European outflows, the
more the euro can weaken and the lower global bond yields can stay.
We answer the outflows question by modelling the Euro-area's net international investment position (N12). We
argue that Europeans now have to become net creditors to the rest of the world and that the NIIP needs to rise
from -10% of GDP to at least 30%. As such, we estimate that Euroglut requires net European capital
outflows of at least 4 trillion euros. This conclusion leads to three investment implications.
First, we continue to expect broad-based euro weakness. European outflows have been even bigger than our
initial (high) expectations, so we are revising our EUR/USD forecasts lower. We now foresee a move down
to 1.00 by the end of the year, 90 cents by 2016 and a new cycle low of 85 cents by 2017.
Second, we expect continued European inflows into foreign assets, particularly fixed income. Our earlier work
demonstrated that the primary destination of European outflows will be core fixed income markets in the rest of
the world, and evidence over the last few months supports these trends: most European outflows are going to
the US, UK and Canada. These flows should keep global yield curves low and flat.
Finally, we see Euroglut as continuing to constrain monetary policy across the European continent for the
foreseeable future. Since our paper in September central banks in Switzerland, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, the
Czech Republic and Poland have all eased. These countries run large current account surpluses. Through a
unique mix of huge excess savings and structurally low yields, the entire European continent will continue to
be a major source of global imbalances for the rest of this decade.
fhttp://pull.db-gmresearch.com/p/909-5609/68285477/DB SpecialReport 2015-03-
10 0900b8c08960dcc9 pd
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
DB-SDNY-0122888
CONFIDENTIAL
SONY GM_00289072
EFTA01461070
Technical Artifacts (4)
View in Artifacts BrowserEmail addresses, URLs, phone numbers, and other technical indicators extracted from this document.
Domain
pull.db-gmresearch.comPhone
8285477Phone
909-5609Tail #
N12Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.