Switzerland ends its peg to the euro, Swiss franc surges

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Swiss-National-Bank-Switzerland

Hang the Bankers

By ending its three year currency peg to the weakening euro,Ā Switzerland has become the first major economy to surrender in the international currency war, and in so doing hasĀ given a long-delayed victory to the Swiss people.

Contrary to the indignant reaction by the media and financial establishment, the decision is not a disaster for Switzerland. A continuance of an open-ended peg to the euro could have ultimately ruined the country.

Its surprise move, perhaps prompted by theĀ European Central Bankā€˜s recently announced intentions to unleash its own quantitative easing program, may be looked at in the future as theĀ first significant counter-attack against our current global system of monetary insanity.

With a centuries-old legacy of economic independence, the Swiss initially had the good sense to avoid joining the monetary quagmire that became the Eurozone. ButĀ when the Swiss National Bank (SNB) decided to enforce a peg against the euro in 2011, the country de facto joined the currency union.

The result was that the franc sank along with the euro and SNBā€™s balance sheet ballooned.Ā In order to maintain those levels, the SNB had to buy approximately $10,000 of euros per year per Swiss citizen!Ā These are enormous sums, even for a rich country.Ā The francs used to buy euros were taken out of the Swiss economy to effectively languish at the SNB. Although the Bank achieved its objective of creating a weak franc, its goal of printing its way to prosperity was far more elusive.

In fact, the policy was doomed from the start. If continued indefinitely, the SNBā€™s balance sheet would have stretched beyond its breaking point.


With the risk of full-blown European QE, bringing with it the prospect of having to back up the toboggan to buy an ever larger quantity of euros, the SNB had no choice but to pull the plug.Ā The mistake was not ending this peg, but in adopting it in the first place. The franc has now rallied anyway (which contrary to conventional ā€œwisdomā€ is a good thing for the Swiss).

Swiss-franc-euro-currency-chart

The Swiss once again have a strong currency with expanded purchasing power.Ā But now Switzerland is stuck with tens of billions in losses on the SNBā€™s bloated 500 billion franc foreign exchange reserves.Ā In the meantime, enforcing the peg has led to economic and financial mistakes that market forces must now correct.

Ironically, without the support of the SNB, full-blown European QE may now be a far more remote possibility, and a euro rally against the dollar may not be too far off.

Goldman Sachs notes the Swissā€™ message is that QE is going to be done and perhaps even larger than previously thought. But perhaps it will have the opposite effect, with tough love from Switzerland forcing the European Union to consider real economic reform rather than QE without Swiss support.Ā In fact, the forces now in motion, accelerated by the SNBā€™s move, may push the Fed that much closer to launching QE4.

Since the ā€œlong dollar, short euroā€ trade is predicated on the expectation of QE in Europe and rate hikes in the U.S., if we end up with QE4 in the U.S. and no QE at all in Europe, the fireworks in the foreign exchange market are just getting started.

Source:Ā http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2015-01-15/peter-schiff-swiss-surrender-wins-currency-war

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