The Swiss National Banks announcement on March 12 that it was taking drastic steps to breath life into its economy ostensibly signalled a new era of exchange rate management by one of the main central banks. Most market participants had expected the SNB to cut its key interest rates to virtually zero, add extra liquidity through additional repo operations and even possibly introduce quantitative easing. But few, if any, had predicted that the central bank would intervene in the foreign exchange market and actively seek to weaken the Swiss franc.
According to Bank of America/Merrill Lynch, the SNBs actions have reiterated the central banks reputation for actively managing the Swiss economy. "The Swiss National Bank again lived up to its reputation," the bank writes in a research note, adding: "With a mere 0.25% target for the three-month Libor, the SNBs rate policy has now hit the trough. In...