SNB Cap Crucial to Protect Economy; Jordan


Thomas Jordan, the Swiss National Bank President, said that the franc ceiling remains an essential strategy to protect the country’s economy. Talking on Oct. 12 in Washington, Jordan said that the minimum exchange rate is very important to the monetary policy as it avoids a tightening of monetary condition in Switzerland.

The Zurich-based SNB implemented the cap of 1.20 per euro in September 2011 after the franc came close to parity with the bloc’s currency. The franc has depreciated about 2.5 percent versus the euro since the European Central Bank announced an unprecedented bond-buying program in September 2012 to defend the euro. This has allowed the SNB to hold off from intervening in currency markets to protect the limit for more than a year, Jordan said last week.

The “euro-Swiss exchange rate is a little bit above the minimum exchange rate, we still have a very strong currency,” Jordan said. “We have a relatively stable situation with respect to the exchange rate,” he said. “The Swiss franc is highly valued, it should in a way depreciate over time. Even under the situation at the moment with the discussion over the fiscal situation in the U.S., the exchange rate remained above the minimum exchange rate of 1.20 to 1 euro.”

The franc has fallen 2.1 percent against the euro this year as the fiscal crisis in the 17-nation currency union retreats. It traded at 1.2341 at 6:55 a.m. in Zurich today.

In 2012, the SNB spent 188 billion francs ($206 billion) buying foreign currency to defend the ceiling. The central bank held a total of 432.4 billion francs of foreign currencies at the end of September, equal to about three-quarters of Switzerland’s annual economic output. Without the cap, the economy would have suffered a recession, Swiss policy makers have said, and they have also repeatedly stressed there is no risk of inflation for the foreseeable future.

The SNB will remove the ceiling in the fourth quarter of 2014 at the earliest, according to a survey of nine economists conducted Oct. 4 to Oct. 9. One economist expects the central bank to exit the cap in that quarter, with four seeing the ceiling to be dropped in 2015 and four in 2016.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD clings to gains near 1.0750 ahead of US jobs report

EUR/USD clings to gains near 1.0750 ahead of US jobs report

EUR/USD clings to modest gains at around 1.0750 after closing the previous two days in positive territory. Investors eagerly await April jobs report from the US, which will include Nonfarm Payrolls and Unemployment Rate readings.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD advances to 1.2550, all eyes on US NFP data

GBP/USD advances to 1.2550, all eyes on US NFP data

The GBP/USD pair trades on a stronger note around 1.2550 amid the softer US Dollar on Friday. Market participants refrain from taking large positions as focus shifts to April Nonfarm Payrolls and ISM Services PMI data from the US.

GBP/USD News

Gold remains stuck near $2,300 ahead of US NFP

Gold remains stuck near $2,300 ahead of US NFP

Gold price struggles to gain any meaningful traction and trades in a tight channel near $2,300. The Fed’s less hawkish outlook drags the USD to a multi-week low and lends support to XAU/USD ahead of the key US NFP data.

Gold News

XRP edges up after week-long decline as Ripple files letter in reply to SEC’s motion

XRP edges up after week-long decline as Ripple files letter in reply to SEC’s motion

Ripple filed a letter to the court to support its April 22 motion to strike new expert materials. The legal clash concerns whether SEC accountant Andrea Fox's testimony should be treated as a summary or expert witness. 

Read more

US NFP Forecast: Nonfarm Payrolls gains expected to cool in April

US NFP Forecast: Nonfarm Payrolls gains expected to cool in April

The NFP report is expected to show that the US economy added 243,000 jobs last month, sharply lower than the 303,000 job creation seen in March. The Unemployment Rate is set to stay unchanged at 3.8% in the same period.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures