The dust appears to have settled in the markets following the surprise announcement earlier from the SNB that it has decided to remove the EURCHF floor which had stood at 1.20 for three years. The initial market reaction to the removal of the floor was extreme, with the euro falling more than 28% to 0.8636 against the Swiss Franc before recovering to trade just above 1.04 late afternoon.
While the removal of the floor only directly impacts EURCHF, the impact was felt everywhere with USDCHF falling to a more than three year low, down more than 27% at its lows. Even none swissy pairs felt the moves, with the euro taking a big hit as the announcement means the SNB will no longer support the currency.
In Europe we saw a lot volatility in stock markets as well, with the initial moves being massive irrational swings in either direction as traders tried to come to grips with what the removal of the floor actually means. Once prices stabilised, we saw a steady rally in Europe as people began to speculate on why the SNB would suddenly remove the floor.
One explanation could be that the ECB has warned the SNB of an impending large quantitative easing package – with many expecting the announcement next week when the central bank meets – and they have concluded that they are unable or unwilling to take on the fight. This would explain the interest in eurozone equities this afternoon, not to mention the sudden change of policy from the SNB as well as
Of course, this is just speculation at this stage and if this is the case it has been horrendously handled by all concerned. SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan didn’t help to dispel these rumours when he refused to confirm when asked if there had been contact with other central banks. He also didn’t cover himself in glory when claiming that it was not a panic decision but a well thought out one.
Given that only a few days ago it was claimed that the floor was the cornerstone of its monetary policy, this is extremely difficult to believe.
I’m sure this isn’t the last we’ll hear on the subject and the SNB are going to be heavily scrutinised in the coming weeks for what appears to be a horribly irresponsible move on their part. For year’s central banks have tried to avoid days like today by being transparent and making moves like this over time while drip feeding their intentions to the markets.
The SNB have shown themselves to be amateurs today and there is many people that will suffer considerably as a result.