Showing posts with label Dutch elections. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dutch elections. Show all posts

Thursday, March 16, 2017

Dutch Elections: The Euro Exchange Rate"s Outlook Suddenly Got a Little Brighter


Dutch PM scores election victory against anti-EU Wilders

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte (above) has claimed a dominating election victory over anti-Islam politician Geert Wilders, who failed the years first test for populism in Europe.

The result has helped the Euro exchange rate complex higher.

The victory of the establishment in Holland could see markets approach European political risk in a new light and would benefit the Euro should growing investor confidence be applied to considerations over upcoming elections in France and Germany.

The limited progress for the EU-sceptic Freedom Party will bring short-term relief for financial markets and tighter intra-Euro-area bond spreads, says Jan von Gerich at Nordea Markets. This time the polling institutions got the results roughly right.

The right-wing Freedom Party (PVV) at 13% of the votes did not do better than expected, but actually slightly worse, in an election with a high participation rate of 82%.

The PVV improved compared to 2012 (5 seats more) but did not reach the 2010 result.

It would thus be hard to call it a rising trend of populism, at least in the Netherlands, says von Gerich.

The Euro to Pound exchange rate trades at 0.8739 at the time of writing, above a low of 0.8666 set on Wednesday, March 15.

However, EUR/GBP remains well below the months best at 0.8788 confirming the notion that the market had expected this outcome.

Strategists at Credit Suisse do however believe that the Euro should soon regain its positive tone; and why shouldn"t it if even-risk in Europe has been vastly overinflated?

The first defeat for populists in Europe might also have important repercussions for the upcoming French presidential election on 23 April and we could see Le Pen losing momentum in the polls and markets starting to reprice risk, says Aila Mihr at Danske Bank.

The Euro to Dollar exchange rate meanwhile trades at 1.0733 having recovered from Tuesdays low at 1.0599.

We are now looking at the best EUR/USD exchange rate since early February; however it is arguable that this is more a function of US Dollar weakness than Euro strength at this stage as the US Federal Reserve disappoint markets with suggestions they might only raise interest rates on two more occasions in 2017.

We can also report that analysts at Deutsche Bank have upgraded their view on the Euro saying they expect it to retain a more positive bias near-term and suggest 1.10 is a possible target.

Looking ahead, von Gerich remains cautious as the bigger test concerning the French electorate remains.

France-related worries are still likely to resurface. A slight easing of the fiscal stance may follow, says von Gerich.

Highlights:
  • The Greens with their young popular leader Jesse Klaver biggest winner and obvious candidate for new government
  • Christian Democrats (CDA) and left-wing liberals of D66 also in winning mood with plusses of six and seven seats, respectively
  • Eurosceptic Wilders PVV gains 5 seats, considerably less than polls had suggested earlier. The PVV becomes the second largest party.
  • Devastating loss for labour party PvdA
  • Heart of new cabinet likely to be formed by VVD, CDA, D66
  • Talks are likely to last for some time possibly months. The final official election results will be published on 21 March by the dutch election commission.

    the new parliament will meet for the first time on 23 March, when official coalition talks will begin. However, informal coalition talks are likely to start today

    Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNEcOLuBxZaxUETyvoH2tm3p9sbANQ&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779424141354&ei=i_fKWLHDDoqohgGh0q6YDg&url=https://www.poundsterlinglive.com/eur/6384-exchange-rates-and-dutch-elections

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    Donald Trump, Federal Reserve, Dutch Elections: Your Thursday Briefing


    Dutch PM scores election victory against anti-EU Wilders

    Listen from a computer, on an iOS device or on an Android device.

    Business

    The Federal Reserve is moving toward the end of its nine-year-old economic stimulus campaign. The central bank raised interest rates on Wednesday for the second time in three months.

    The U.S. charged two Russian intelligence officers with directing a criminal conspiracy that stole data on 500 million Yahoo accounts in 2014.

    Vowing to expand the number of jobs in the auto industry, Mr. Trump halted a move to tighten fuel standards.

    U.S. stocks were up on Wednesday. Heres a snapshot of global markets.

    Smarter Living

    Last week, we asked readers to share their morning routines, and 331 were gracious enough to respond. Among the most mentioned: Coffee (126 mentions), prayer or meditation (84), running/walking (95) or exercise (94), and breakfast (97).

    Here are some of the tips, and a few quick links about warm-ups and cool-downs, ways to be mindful and the power of to-do lists.

    Recipe of the day: Have pie for dinner with this torta pasqualina filled with leafy greens and cheese.

    Noteworthy

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    In todays 360 video, watch as colorful flowers blossom in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in California.

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    By MELISSA LYTTLE, LOGAN JAFFE and SAMANTHA QUICK on Publish Date March 16, 2017. Photo by Melissa Lyttle for The New York Times. Technology by Samsung. . Watch in Times Video

    A grim fate for a natural wonder.

    Scientists say large sections of the Great Barrier Reef, a coral ecosystem off the coast of Australia so large that it can be seen from space, are dead or dying because of rising sea temperatures.

    The level of destruction wasnt expected for another 30 years, the author of a new study said.

    Photo Bleached coral off the Australian coast. Climate change is not a future threat, one scientist said. On the Great Barrier Reef, its been happening for 18 years. Credit Reuters

    March Madness begins.

    The first round of the N.C.A.A. mens basketball tournament starts today. Well have live updates, scores and analysis of the first round.

    A spoiler becomes a savior.

    In the past few decades, the internet has threatened just about every cultural medium, from movies to music to something close to this writers heart, journalism. But people are starting to pay for online content, a big deal that our tech columnist says is difficult to overstate.

    Press freedom in Egypt.

    Declan Walsh, our Cairo bureau chief, joined a group of journalists to discuss the difficulties of reporting from the Middle East.

    Best of late-night TV.

    The hosts were not impressed by Rachel Maddows anticlimactic revelation of Mr. Trumps tax forms the day before. Is this news or a reality show? asked Stephen Colbert.

    Stephen Pulls A "Rachel Maddow" Video by The Late Show with Stephen ColbertBack Story

    A new space race is underway, fueled by billionaires like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos who are eager to capitalize on booming technology and the allure of space tourism.

    Such audacious plans werent always embraced. In 1920, when Robert H. Goddard outlined how a rocket might reach the moon, The Times wrote that he seemed to lack the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools and argued, incorrectly, that thrust was not possible in a vacuum.

    Photo Robert H. Goddard, pictured in Roswell, N.M., in 1938, was a pioneer of the space age. Credit Associated Press

    History has been kinder to Dr. Goddard since his death in 1945, and hes now viewed as a pioneer of the space age.

    A crucial step in his career came on this day in 1926, when he tested the first liquid-fueled rocket, from his aunts farm in Massachusetts. It reached only 41 feet, but, according to NASA, the experiment was as significant to history as that of the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk.

    After Apollo 11 launched in 1969, even The Times came around, noting in a correction that it was now definitely established that a rocket can function in a vacuum as well as in an atmosphere.

    But Dr. Goddard deserves the last word. About perseverance, he wrote: When old dreams die, new ones come to take their place. G*d pity a one-dream man.

    Charles McDermid contributed reporting.

    _____

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    Source: http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&ct2=us&usg=AFQjCNHlcC2sXHnZ-O8uKCw3mdLDaaromw&clid=c3a7d30bb8a4878e06b80cf16b898331&cid=52779416608179&ei=F9XKWJjODYix3AHi6pOICg&url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/16/briefing/donald-trump-federal-reserve-dutch-elections.html

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