Tuesday 12 April 2011

Sterling takes a pasting as UK inflation undershoots

What’s driving the currency markets more than anything else at present? Central Bank interest rate policy. What’s driving interest rate policy more than anything else? Inflation levels.

For this reason, you can see why the market response to today’s UK headline inflation figure for March has been so marked.

Data revealed that inflation in the UK has dropped from 4.4% to 4.0% the first monthly decline since July 2010 and the largest decline since February of that year. With oil prices (as well as other commodities) through the roof, we must admit we were expecting another rise, albeit a modest one. The figure is certainly welcome news to consumers and indeed the Bank of England (BoE), but it hasn’t done sterling any favours.

A fall in food and drink prices appears responsible for the monthly inflation drop. It certainly plays into the hands of Mervyn King and Adam Posen; they have for a long time claimed that inflationary pressures were temporary and today’s data supports this view.

Sterling suffered in the immediate aftermath of the news, falling sharply against the euro and the US dollar as investors scale back their BoE interest rate expectations. A May interest rate hike is now highly unlikely, and the current market consensus of an August rate rise seems altogether more probable. With inflationary pressures potentially easing, the MPC can sit tight and wait for the UK recovery to gain traction before shifting policy.

With UK economic figures still very inconsistent, evidenced this morning by poor retail sales, we now expect sterling to underperform for the remainder of this month. Sterling is looking decidedly vulnerable against the euro in particular, as the market has fully priced in another two ECB rate rises this year. These expectations may to some degree be dependent on eurozone inflation figures due to be released on Friday. With today’s UK data in mind, only a similarly sharp dip in eurozone inflation is likely to limit the single currency’s appeal.

Whilst arch MPC-hawk Andrew Sentance may well be fuming at today’s figures, the UK doves needn’t get ahead of themselves. UK inflation remains double the BoE’s target and if we see a strong UK growth figure for the opening three months of 2011, then a second quarter UK rate rise could return to view. In the near term, next week’s MPC minutes will interest the markets. However, a turnaround in sterling’s fortunes may well have to wait until the key GDP figure at the end of the month.

Based on today’s unforeseen inflation figures, we have put our BoE interest rate expectations back in line with the market at August, pending the GDP figure.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX


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