Denmark tries to silence currency speculators

Minister dismisses speculation that it will follow Swiss move

Denmark is trying to silence currency speculators as the government and central bank insist the Nordic country won’t follow Switzerland in severing its euro ties.

"Circumstances significantly different from Denmark's" were behind the Swiss National Bank's decision, Danish Economy Minister Morten Oestergaard said in a phone interview. "Any comparison between Denmark and Switzerland is impossible."

The comments followed yesterday’s surprise decision by the Danish central bank to cut its deposit rate by 15 basis points to minus 0.2 per cent, matching a record low last seen during the darkest hours of Europe’s debt crisis in 2012. Like the Swiss, the Danes lowered rates after interventions in the market proved insufficient.

Denmark will probably deliver another rate cut on Jan. 22 as krone "appreciation pressure prevails" with the European Central Bank set to present details of its bond-purchase program, Danske Bank A/S reiterated today.

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Danske, Denmark's biggest bank, says it's been inundated by calls from offshore investors and several hedge funds seeking advice on how to profit from the latest developments in currency markets. SEB AB, Scandinavia's largest currency trader, says it's fielded similar calls. Their response has been to tell investors that Denmark's three-decades-old peg is backed by the ECB, unlike the SNB's former currency regime.

'Necessary tools'

Denmark has “a long-lasting and politically firmly anchored fixed-currency policy,” Oestergaard said. “This situation should not be overly dramatised.”

To underline the point, the central bank yesterday sought to reassure investors that its monetary policy arsenal is big enough should speculators try to test its resolve. "We have the necessary tools" to defend the peg, Karsten Biltoft, head of communications at the central bank, said by phone. Asked whether

Denmark could ever consider abandoning its currency peg, he said, “Of course not.” Biltoft described as “somewhat off” any attempt to draw parallels between the Danish and Swiss currency pegs. “I don’t think you can make a comparison between the two cases,” he said.

ECB QE

Yet the speculation is proving hard to put to rest. Defending Denmark's euro peg "might be easier said than done in the current environment," Ken Wattret, an economist at BNP Paribas, said in a note. "The next test will of course be the upcoming ECB policy announcement on Thursday." Given BNP's estimate that the ECB will purchase 600 billion euros ($697 billion) in sovereign bonds, "further upward pressure on the DKK is likely," he said. Governor Lars Rohde said late last year that Danish rates were under pressure as the ECB prepares to start its program of quantitative easing. His job is to target 7.46038 kroner per euro. While the bank's official tolerance band is 2.25 percent, in practice it has stayed within about 1 per cent of the target.

“With the lending rate at 5 basis points now, there is little room for maneuver there but the deposit rate could be lowered again, widening the corridor,” Wattret said. History suggests there may be “scope for a further 15 basis-point cut in the deposit rate from current levels if the lending rate stays put.”

Unlike the Swiss franc, the Danish currency plays a minor role in world markets. The krone accounted for 0.8 per cent of global currency trading in 2013, according to a triennial survey by the Bank for International Settlements. The Swiss franc had a 5.2 per cent share.

Yesterday's cut was probably preceded by "massive" flows into Denmark's currency market, said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, head of fixed-income research at Danske Bank.