Thursday 24 May 2012

UK recession confirmed...and it’s worse than first thought

Data on Wednesday has confirmed that not only did the UK enter a double-dip recession in Q1 of 2012, but it contracted by 0.3%, rather than the -0.2% figure that was initially estimated April. At the time of the initial estimate in April, sterling was spared quite a bit of pain because the market thought it knew better than the Office of National Statistics (which releases the GDP figures). In particular, many questioned the ONS’ assessment of growth in the construction sector. Ironically, a downward revision to construction growth was largely responsible for today's headline.

The MPC was also a little guilty of overestimating UK economic conditions in the first quarter, choosing to focus on some more positive but ultimately misleading PMI surveys from the UK construction, services and manufacturing sectors. Indeed Adam Posen, for his part, has admitted as much.

What seemed like a bright start to the year had definitely fizzled out then and the UK economy is set to struggle for the rest of 2012, possibly contracting by 0.5%, as ongoing UK austerity kicks in and the eurozone crisis weighs on external demand, and internal lending and confidence.

Still though, sterling has weathered Wednesday’s downward GDP revision very well. There is very much a sense that the market is fully aware that UK growth will be stagnant this year, but at least it is getting its public finances in order, and as shown by the UK’s ultra-low borrowing costs, it is clearly removed from the threat of eurozone debt contagion. Sterling’s appeal isn’t based on the imminence of monetary tightening or a positive growth outlook. The pound is basically the poor man’s US dollar, a second tier safe-haven.

In line with a pessimistic outlook for Greece and regardless of the likelihood of further QE from the BoE and the UK’s vulnerability to eurozone developments, we have a positive outlook for sterling against the euro and other risky, commodity currencies like the AUD and ZAR. Clearly, our view is less positive against the US dollar – we see GBP/USD heading down to $1.50 in the second half of this year.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
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