Thursday 7 June 2012

UK services sector growth solid and BoE holds fire on QE

This morning’s figure from the UK services sector was solid, coming in at 53.3, the same as in May but well above expectations. The figure is nothing to get too excited about but it is certainly a relief to see that the UK services sector remains firmly in expansion territory, even if the UK economy as a whole is contracting slightly.

One point to consider here is that these PMI surveys have lost a little bit of credibility given the positive surveys that characterised Q1, only for a -0.3% GDP figure to be announced. Nonetheless, the PMI surveys will remain significant as long as the MPC places such emphasis upon them.

Warmer weather and expectations for increased activity relating to the Jubilee and the Olympics helped stave off a services sector decline in May but weakness in the UK manufacturing sector remains the major concern with respect to the UK economy at present. Last week’s manufacturing PMI figure was very poor indeed.

The Bank of England’s monetary policy decision for June was announced at noon today, revealing a ‘no’ vote on further quantitative easing, for now. This morning’s UK services figure will have eased some of the pressure being felt by some of the MPC members to vote in favour of QE. Today’s monetary policy decision is likely to have been a closer call than in previous meetings. Judging by sterling’s rally in the aftermath of the decision, many market players had been suspicious of a June QE call over the past week or so. Nonetheless, we were not expecting them to pull the trigger again today.


The sounds out of the MPC just haven’t been dovish enough to indicate another round of easing was imminent, though the weak UK data over recent weeks arguably would have justified it. The MPC is probably holding more QE back as a fire extinguisher if the worst case scenario emerges from the eurozone debt crisis. The majority of the MPC seems content that the last round of QE is still feeding through and providing stimulus, they look happy to wait and see for now. In terms of inflation, the balances of risks on the medium term outlook remain equal, thus making any fine-tuning less attractive.

As ever, the minutes in a fortnight will be all-important – David Miles will clearly have voted for more QE and Posen is likely to have joined him, all eyes will be on the rest of the voters.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
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