Especially with the greek vote coming up.
The way I see it:
1. eurchf is right now only still at >1.20 because the snb pushes against the market.
2. There should be many groups that invest their money into the chf, out of the euro (not necessary with leverage!)
3. Without leverage, there is almost zero risk because: You can hold a position for longer times if you are wrong, and since chf is considered "save", and the swiss economy is ok, there is no reason to believe that it should get weak any time soon
4. This would mean in conclusion that more and more forces are pushing against the SNB
5. We know from history that a central bank can not work against the market without limits (and it is my understanding that if a central bank would do this, mainly by printing more money, in the long term, after economics change, this would lead to way to much money in the market, and would increase inflation a lot - thats why a central bank has to stop at some point)
6. This means... the maximum risk would be that the eurchf gains a little, while the possibility that the 1.20 break downwards, massively, after the snb cant hold it at that mark anymore increase with the time the euro crisis stays the way it is.
7. If Greece votes to get out of the euro by not complying to previous agreements... then this would create additional massive pressure on the SNB, maybe enough for it to give in.
8. The eurchf chart shows almost no volatility at the 1.20 mark, indicating that the forces of the market and the SNB are now almost equal.
9. If Greece gets out of the euro the effect on other euro countries might be worse then expected, making the chf an even more appreciated save currency.
So... in the end, shorting and holding eurchf at about 1.20 *might* be low risk. Even if we expect a volatility of 400-500 pips against us, it "should" at least come back so we can get out only with a minus in interest rates over the time period of holding (and spread of course), as long as chf is considered save, and the euro zone is in trouble.
This is my understanding of the current situation and the possible chance in shorting eurchf.
I know my fundamental knowledge is quite weak... so feel free to point me to my errors.
So what do you guys think?
The way I see it:
1. eurchf is right now only still at >1.20 because the snb pushes against the market.
2. There should be many groups that invest their money into the chf, out of the euro (not necessary with leverage!)
3. Without leverage, there is almost zero risk because: You can hold a position for longer times if you are wrong, and since chf is considered "save", and the swiss economy is ok, there is no reason to believe that it should get weak any time soon
4. This would mean in conclusion that more and more forces are pushing against the SNB
5. We know from history that a central bank can not work against the market without limits (and it is my understanding that if a central bank would do this, mainly by printing more money, in the long term, after economics change, this would lead to way to much money in the market, and would increase inflation a lot - thats why a central bank has to stop at some point)
6. This means... the maximum risk would be that the eurchf gains a little, while the possibility that the 1.20 break downwards, massively, after the snb cant hold it at that mark anymore increase with the time the euro crisis stays the way it is.
7. If Greece votes to get out of the euro by not complying to previous agreements... then this would create additional massive pressure on the SNB, maybe enough for it to give in.
8. The eurchf chart shows almost no volatility at the 1.20 mark, indicating that the forces of the market and the SNB are now almost equal.
9. If Greece gets out of the euro the effect on other euro countries might be worse then expected, making the chf an even more appreciated save currency.
So... in the end, shorting and holding eurchf at about 1.20 *might* be low risk. Even if we expect a volatility of 400-500 pips against us, it "should" at least come back so we can get out only with a minus in interest rates over the time period of holding (and spread of course), as long as chf is considered save, and the euro zone is in trouble.
This is my understanding of the current situation and the possible chance in shorting eurchf.
I know my fundamental knowledge is quite weak... so feel free to point me to my errors.
So what do you guys think?