Showing posts with label Mervyn King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mervyn King. Show all posts

Monday, 18 February 2013

Caxton FX Weekly Round-up and Outlook


Weak UK data puts further downward pressure on the pound
The prospects for a strong return to growth for the UK retail sector in January seemed very reasonable based on anecdotal evidence but Friday’s -0.6% stopped us dead in our tracks. When you combine this with the Bank of England’s Quarterly Inflation Report, which highlighted an outlook of weak growth and persistently high inflation over the next few years, it is little wonder that sterling has failed to bounce back in the past few sessions.

The MPC minutes are released on Wednesday and despite poor economic figures, we believe it is more likely that the lone QE voter David Miles dropped his vote than actually recruiting other members to his cause. The high inflation outlook really doesn’t seem consistent with additional QE, particularly while the Funding for Lending Scheme is providing the UK economy with support. Whilst Sir Mervyn King did state last week that the MPC stands ready to do more QE if necessary, we still believe his doubts over how much more this can achieve will dominate the voting in the coming months.

What hasn’t been helpful to the pound today have been Martin Weale’s weekend comments supporting a weaker pound to aid exports and address the UK’s current account deficit. Some might have interpreted this as a rare foray into the dangerous field of verbal intervention but we doubt it was much more than an example of wishful thinking.

Euro gets away with awful eurozone GDP figures
GDP data from throughout the eurozone, which significantly included Germany, was very disappointing last week. The euro is trading at a three-week low against the US dollar as a result of this confirmation that the eurozone recession is worse than many had feared, but levels above $1.33 are still pretty firm. Meanwhile, the euro continues to bully the pound down below €1.16.  

News out of the eurozone may have been bad last week but hopes are rather higher for this week’s eurozone data. Further improvements are expected within this week’s key German economic sentiment and business climate gauges. Meanwhile, Thursday’s eurozone PMI figures are expected to point to stabilization, even if the region does remain in recession territory.

US dollar enjoying plenty of demand amid firmer data
Recent headlines out of the US have been upbeat; weekly unemployment claims data improved sharply, while manufacturing and consumer sentiment figures also impressed. This provided a timely contrast with awful data out of the UK and the eurozone and may well have reminded many players why the USD should, in our view, be preferred to the EUR and GBP (in spite of QE3). The week ahead brings the minutes from the last Fed meeting (Wednesday), which could well reveal some discussion as to when QE3 can start to be scaled back. The bar remains pretty high in respect to this but discussion alone should be USD-positive.

End of week forecast
GBP / EUR
1.1500
GBP / USD
1.5400
EUR / USD
1.3400
GBP / AUD
1.5100


Sterling is trading below €1.16 this afternoon and we suspect the rate will head lower from here, with levels close to €1.15 representing a realistic target. It continues to prove tricky to call a bottom on GBP/USD’s slide but we think the pair will take a close look at $1.54 before a bounce is in sight.


Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Thursday, 27 September 2012

UK Q2 GDP contracts by less than expected: things are looking up



The final UK GDP figure has been announced this morning and the news was very good; the UK economy only contracted by 0.4%, less than than the previous -0.5% estimate and considerably less than the original -0.7% reading. So in simple terms, the UK economy was only around half as bad as first thought in Q2. An upward revision to the construction sector’s performance is a key cause of the upward revision.

The Bank of England reckons that the extra bank holiday for the Queen’s Jubilee in June cost the UK economy as much as 0.5%, so underlying growth could actually have been positive in Q2. There is a big difference between stalling growth and deepening recession. Today’s upward revision really dovetails with what Mervyn King has been saying for the last few months. The figures released by the Office of National Statistics (the GDP figures) have underestimated UK growth, or at least overestimated the impact of the Jubilee bank holiday.

UK figures have been showing some significant improvements this summer, helped by the Olympics, and MPC member Fisher has commented today that we can expect a “very strong” GDP reading for Q3. In fact, we are expecting Q3 growth to more than make up for Q2’s contraction, perhaps showing a reading as high as 0.7%.

Of course, downside risks should be noted and the UK is a long way from being out of the woods and free from recession fears. The eurozone debt crisis continues to pose a threat to our banking system and it is certain that eurozone growth will be more or less non-existent next year. Nonetheless, this morning’s figure is good news and October 26 will bring more in the form of a robust preliminary Q3 GDP reading. All good news for the pound, which has already enjoyed a rally today, trading above €1.26 and $1.62. 

Richard Driver
Currency Analyst
Caxton FX

Thursday, 6 September 2012

September Monthly Outlook: GBP/EUR, GBP/USD


August was another strong month for the single currency as the financial markets continued to take comfort in ECB President Draghi’s pledges to do “whatever it takes” to save the euro. There were no major swings among the major pairings, with August typically being a sleepy month where traders and policymakers alike take their summer vacations. Despite a recent upturn in US economic figures, the dollar remains on the back foot, with QE3 speculation more prevalent than ever.

Recent domestic data suggests conditions have improved somewhat in the past month, which gives hope to the market and consumers that the UK economy can yet stage some sort of recovery in the second half of the year. The Bank of England will be content to see how this bounce in activity progresses, so fears of imminent quantitative easing should subside for the time being. Moreover, with a busy calendar for the US and the eurozone in the coming weeks, the UK economy is very much out of the spotlight at present.

The month ahead could well be a pivotal one in the timeline of the eurozone debt crisis. We are seeing the European Central Bank preparing to launch a programme of unlimited bond-purchases as part of a wider bailout package for Spain. The pressure will now build on Spanish PM Rajoy to make the necessary request for help but the conditions Germany pushes for is likely to be subject to tense negotiations.

Next week (September 12) brings the long-awaited decision from the German Constitutional Court on the legality of the European Stability Mechanism and the fiscal compact agreed earlier in the year, around which there is considerably uncertainty. There is also plenty of political risk in the form of a general election in the Netherlands, while the Troika will spend much of September assessing Greece’s attempts to reform before deciding on whether to release the essential next aid tranche. In addition to all these eurozone events, we will learn whether the Fed will finally pull the trigger on QE3 this month.

GBP/EUR
Sterling remains at strong levels against the euro; it is quite clear that the market has spent recent weeks waiting to see how September’s events panned out before punishing the euro any further. Indeed, whilst decisions and concrete actions have yet again been conspicuous by their absence, comments from ECB policymakers and eurozone political leaders have been falling on sympathetic, or rather, hopeful ears. This has fuelled a rebound for the euro.

Signs of life in the UK economy
The UK economy has enjoyed some good news in the past week in the form of some better than expected manufacturing and services sector growth figures, with the latter in particular raising hopes for a recovery. UK unemployment continues to make progress, with the jobless rate falling to an 11-month low of 8.0%. However, the market will need more convincing that the worst of this double-dip recession is behind us before sterling really begins to reap the benefits of improved data. The initial Q2 GDP figure of -0.7% was revised up to -0.5% but confidence is understandably still very fragile. The Bank of England looks content to remain in ‘wait and see’ mode with respect to the need for further QE, so the risks to sterling in this regard are limited for at least the next month.

Will Super Mario save the day?
Positivity surrounding an imminent bond-purchasing plan to deal with soaring Spanish and Italian borrowing costs has been the key feature of the debt crisis in the past few weeks. Timescales as to the launch are immensely tricky to pin down due to the need for Spain to request help from the ECB but the central bank’s fire-fighting measures are likely to be seen a positive for the euro when it does finally come about.

However, these unconventional measures do little to address the fundamental issue at the heart of Spain and Italy’s predicament – their lack of competitiveness. The eurozone periphery cannot bounce back with the euro as overvalued as it continues to be (regardless of the depreciation we have seen this year). Indeed the ECB’s commitment to fire-fighting this summer has exacerbated the situation by strengthening the euro. Crisis management policies like bond-purchases will not see the eurozone through this crisis. We have seen this year that ECB interest rate cuts weaken the euro and for us, it is only a matter of time before the ECB takes this option again, finally putting concerns over inflation to one side. The incentive to cut rates is all too clear; the ECB itself has this week significantly downgraded the eurozone’s growth prospects for both this year and next (possibly as low as -0.6% and -0.4% in 2012 and 2013 respectively).

The ECB and Germany’s opposition to granting the ESM a banking license also continues to stand in the way of any so-called ‘silver-bullet’ solution. Such a move would effectively give the permanent bailout fund unlimited access to ECB funding, eliminating the concerns that linger over inadequate firepower.

Huge risk events ahead in September
The next major obstacle in store is the German Constitution Court’s ruling on whether the new role for the ESM (the permanent bailout fund) and the eurozone’s fiscal compact complies with German law. If it does not, then this would be disastrous for the euro and while the probability is of a positive outcome, the risks to the contrary are significant. September 12 is made all the more important by the Netherlands’’ general election, which has been centred on the issue of the debt crisis. If anti-austerity parties do as well as polls are suggesting, then this is likely to weigh on the single currency.

Concerns over Greece are likely to come to the fore again this month, as the Greek coalition struggles to work through another €11.5bn of spending cuts and as the Troika returns to complete its review of Greece’s efforts to address its fiscal position. A positive Troika report is necessary in October if Greece is to receive its essential next emergency loan, without which it will default and most likely exit the eurozone.
Sterling may well have another slow month against the euro in September as the market prices in a (temporary) resolution to Spain’s crisis. However, we do see this pair resuming its uptrend beyond the short-term, slowly creeping higher towards, though probably falling short of €1.30 by the end of the year. €1.25 should provide plenty of support and we don’t see sterling weakening below this level but equally, provided the German constitutional court give a positive ruling on the ESM and fiscal compact, sterling could well spend much of the coming weeks below €1.2650. 

GBP/USD
Sterling is flying at a 3 ½ month high at present, despite the UK economy’s significant underperformance of its US counterpart. The QE3 issue continues to haunt the US dollar and delay what we continue to believe will be a robust end to the year for the greenback. There is no doubt that the US Federal Reserve has engaged in greater discussion of further monetary accommodation, with several policymakers convinced of the need of QE3. However, Ben Bernanke chose not to utilise his annual Jackson Hole speech to signal another round of QE, though crucially he said nothing to discount it.

Can the US dollar avoid QE3?
It does appear to be a case of ‘when’ not ‘if’ with regard to QE3. The Fed’s reasoning on QE3 seems to have changed from a stance of committing to more QE in the event that the US recovery deteriorates further, to a commitment to QE unless conditions markedly improve. Economic figures out of the US have been somewhat improved in the past few weeks, which may well convince Ben Bernanke to keep his powder dry on September 13. However, there is every chance that Q4 will bring the decision the market is hoping for.

The sounds out of the Bank of England in recent weeks have given the market some reason to look kindly upon the pound. A cut to the BoE’s already record-low interest rate has effectively been discounted and Mervyn King appears content to wait to see the impact of its Funding for Lending Scheme before introducing further quantitative easing. Whether or not more QE comes in November really depends on growth figures in the interim but the latest indicators do suggest a mild upturn.

Nonetheless, we continue to envisage a significant move lower for the EUR/USD pair in the coming months. If this comes about, it will weigh on the GBP/USD pair to a great extent. The euro’s rally against the USD is looking increasingly stretched at current levels of $1.2650 and given that we see this pair below $1.20 by the end of the year, we do expect GBP/USD to retreat significantly from the $1.59 level where it is trading at present. A rate of $1.57 is realistic in the coming few weeks. 

Richard Driver 
Currency Analyst 
Caxton FX

Monday, 13 August 2012

Caxton FX Weekly Round-up: Dollar poised for rally

Pressure on for revised UK Q2 GDP figure

Last week’s all-important Quarterly Inflation Report from the Bank of England provided sterling with support just when a return to the €1.25 level was looking probable. King seemed to discard the option of another interest rate cut, describing it as potentially “counterproductive” and the likely effects to be “neither here nor there.” There were no real signals that the BoE is poised to introduce further quantitative easing, which again was supportive of the pound. The MPC minutes released on Wednesday should provide further clarity in this regard; we expect a unanimous decision to hold fire on more QE.

In addition to being less dovish than expected on monetary policy, Mervyn King also stuck to his guns in arguing that UK growth is not as weak as headline data has suggested. King’s comments have increased hopes and expectations that the initial -0.7% GDP figure for Q2 will be revised up. This was supported by last week’s better than expected, although still alarmingly weak in the bigger picture, manufacturing and industrial production figures from June. If an improved GDP figure is not forthcoming on Friday 24th August, then sterling could well be hit hard.

ECB has done nothing so far but hopes remain high

Despite the ECB having failed to take any concrete action at its meeting at the start of this month, the euro remains well away from its late-July lows. This is largely thanks to ECB President Draghi’s indications that the central bank is gearing up to resume the purchasing of Spanish and Italian bonds, in an effort to bring down their unsustainably high borrowing costs.

However, while some short-term relief for the euro would likely follow some concrete action from the ECB, it will be no panacea. Bond-purchases will be tied to very strict conditions with respect to economic reforms. Mario Draghi has suggested that ECB bond-purchases would only occur once a country had requested help, but this request may not come if Germany is too strict with the conditions it attaches. At the very least, German demands may could easily delay progress. In any case, bond-purchases took place last year but we are back in panic mode once again, so we find it hard to believe that ECB action will provide anything more than a short-term lift for the single currency.

Despite the positive sentiment that has built towards the euro over the past few weeks, we continue to hold a distinctly bearish view of the single currency over the rest of 2012. While sterling has plenty of its own domestic issues, chief among which are ongoing weak growth and the threat of the UK losing its AAA credit rating, it should be able to climb higher towards €1.30 this year.

GBP/EUR is currently trading at €1.27 and another push higher may prove tricky in the short-term as GBP/USD is looking ripe for another downward correction. Despite ongoing debate within and outside the US Federal Reserve, the central bank is still resisting the urge to announce or even signal QE3. This case has been strengthened most recently by last month’s better than expected US labour market update. The dollar looks well-positioned for a return to strength this month then, which could bring the GBP/USD rate well down from the current $1.57 level.

End of week forecast

GBP / EUR 1.2750
GBP / USD 1.5550
EUR / USD 1.2250
GBP / AUD 1.5000

Richard Driver

Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Thursday, 21 June 2012

MPC minutes point to July QE call, but it's fully priced in

Yesterday’s MPC minutes dropped a bit of a bomb as far as we are concerned. They revealed that three MPC members (Posen, Fisher and King) have joined David Miles in voting for another round of quantitative easing. Posen was bound to vote for more QE after backtracking in light of weak recent UK growth data. That was as far as we saw the voting pattern shifting really, so the extra two votes came as a surprise.

The language of the MPC minutes were decidedly dovish and given that the UK inflation rate has surprisingly eased to 2.8% (from 3.0%) since the last meeting, we expect at least one other MPC policymaker to join the dovish ranks in July, and that is all that will be needed. The fact that BoE Governor King will be there to lead the doves makes a QE majority all the more likely, as will the intensifying risks out of the eurozone.

The following quote tells you that more QE in July is pretty much nailed on: “most members judged that some further economic stimulus was either warranted immediately or would probably become warranted in order to meet the inflation target.”

Amid plenty of speculation that the Bank of England could cut the base rate from the current record low of 0.5% for the first time since March 2009, it is interesting to note from the minutes that whilst the MPC did discuss the merits of a rate cut, they saw no advantage in doing so at the present time.

Sterling has weathered this week’s QE storm very well, not least because, thanks to the global economic downturn, there are very few currencies without risk-factors surrounding them. The dollar has suffered considerably from QE3 speculation, which the Fed has made clear it could opt for this year, whilst the euro has more problems than this blogger has time to allude to. All in all, sterling actually held up pretty well during the last round of QE and given that another round of QE will by now have been fully priced in, it shouldn’t be too much of weight on sterling moving forward. Fortunately for GBP, the market is rather more concerned with the Grecians.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Bank of England unanimous on holding off further QE...for now

Today saw the Bank of England release minutes from the most recent Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, revealing a unanimous vote to leave the current programme of quantitative easing unchanged at €275bn.

This was largely expected; the minutes just confirmed that the MPC is happy to adopt a wait-and-see approach to the effects of October’s increase in quantitative easing (QE) on UK growth and inflation.
I wouldn’t have been surprised to see Adam Posen press for additional QE but on this occasion he was in line with his fellow MPC colleagues.

Nonetheless, the MPC noted that the risks of a major eurozone financial collapse is greater than ever, which clearly favours the introduction of further QE down the line.

While inflation dropped fairly sharply in October, Caxton FX expects that the MPC will want to see inflation continue to decline in the coming months before adding further stimulus.

October’s asset-purchases would have run their course by February 2012 but if we see UK inflation continue to drop - as the Bank of England expects it to - and UK growth continues to struggle, which is more than likely, then February seems a strong bet for the next round of QE.

If the Bank ramps up QE next year, thankfully sterling shouldn’t suffer too much when it does come as QE expectations have already made their mark on the pound.

The GBP/EUR rate is looking healthier today, not based on the MPC’s minutes however, but largely due to some awful industrial orders data out of the eurozone.

We feel it’s only a matter of time before the eurozone debt crisis and the imminent eurozone recession sends sterling up above €1.20.

Richard Driver
Senior Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Tuesday, 17 May 2011

UK inflation provides an upside surprise

Data this morning has shown that the UK headline inflation figure has risen to 4.5%, but expectations of a higher figure had already been priced in over the morning. With the previous figure showing that prices had increased by 4.0% from the same point last year this latest monthly rise is in line with strong global price pressures. As the highest UK inflationary figure rise since 2008, the increase is well ahead of the forecasted 4.2% rise.

This indicates that last month’s ease in price pressures was due to temporary factors, with fuel prices and the VAT rise taking their toll on UK inflation. The market had a BoE rate rise priced in for December 2011, and I wouldn’t be surprised if today’s data brings some of those bets forward.

King recently indicated that UK headline inflation could hit 5.0% in the coming months – if he is right then it could well force the MPC to succumb to pressure and raise rates.

Sterling spiked in the build-up to the data release, but how far it will push on from here in light of the upside surprise remains to be seen. UK inflation is expected to climb quite aggressively, and despite today’s data there is still a need for much stronger UK growth before the BoE tightens policy. King’s open letter to George Osborne later today and tomorrow’s MPC minutes should clarify the level of genuine hawkishness within the BoE - a rate rise before December could be disastrous.

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


For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Thursday, 10 March 2011

UK interest rates left unchanged - expect a rise in June

It is no secret that central bank interest rates represent the main driver of the foreign exchange market at present. So why isn’t today’s monthly UK interest rate announcement an exciting one? Well, because we knew that the 0.5% rate would be maintained, as it has been every month for the past two years.
UK inflationary pressures are soaring at double the BoE’s target and given the ECB’s recent hawkish indication of an April rate hike, there has been growing demand for the MPC to take similar action to tighten policy. However, the BoE is wary of destabilising the economic recovery at this stage and we don’t see rates changing until June. Nor should they; we really need to wait until June to know what impact the UK’s austerity measures will have on British growth.

However, it will be interesting to see what the minutes of the MPC reveal. At last month’s MPC meeting, resident hawks Andrew Sentance and Martin Weale recruited Spencer Dale to their cause, but remained outnumbered by 6:3. We may see a fourth vote added in favour of a rate rise this month, but we still don’t envisage the BoE raising rates before June - by which time there should be firmer evidence that economic conditions are improving.

Given that the MPC was expected to maintain rates, we have seen a somewhat surprising drop in value for sterling, falling by over a cent against the dollar to its lowest point in almost a fortnight. However, the focus for the market will now turn on the EU summit this weekend, where officials will attempt to work towards an agreement on the eurozone’s fiscal troubles. After a week where the euro has suffered somewhat against its major counterparts on the back of flare-ups in Greece, Portugal and now Spain, the single currency would benefit hugely from some progress on the peripheral debt issue.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX
For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Wednesday, 2 March 2011

Pound punches high with recovery looking promising

The pound’s run of good form against the greenback continued today, with the price being dragged up through $1.63 as comments from the BoE governor Mervyn King yesterday did little to dampen the markets view on interest rate speculation.

Sterling came within a whisker of a 13-month high today as King exhaustedly claimed that “raising interest rates to make a gesture is self-defeating.” This followed a rather more assertive Conservative MP who lambasted the senior MPC members for wildly underestimating inflation.

Charles Bean, the deputy governor of the MPC showed signs of leaning towards the hawkish camp by echoing this sentiment in a written statement to the Treasury select committee, exclaiming his concern that this elevated inflation may well persist longer than he anticipated. This contrasts with comments from Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke who claimed that soaring oil prices pose only a “temporary threat” to inflation, which indicated to the market that the Fed will persist with its ultra-loose, accommodative monetary policy for the foreseeable future. Under this outlook, the pound’s rally could yet go further!

The threat of inflation entrenching itself in the UK do appear very real, and hence we’re seeing the market price in a near-term rate rise. But are the arguments about the fragility of the economy still stacking up?

Recent figures suggest that the UK economy has rebounded strongly in the first quarter of 2011, offsetting Q4s disappointment. Positive data from the construction industry, released earlier today, followed equally upbeat manufacturing data earlier in the week. These two sectors combined account for around 20% of our GDP. If data from the services sector tomorrow completes the picture, the UK economic recovery will certainly look to be gathering some momentum.

As far as “cable” (GBP/USD) goes then, we could well be seeing these dizzying heights sustained, with the next tough resistance level seen at 1.6450. However, against the equally well-performing single currency the story may be slightly different. The market is expecting some hawkish comments on inflationary pressures from ECB president Trichet in the ECB press conference tomorrow. Such comments look set to keep the €1.20 level out of the picture for the time being. 

Ewdard Knox
Analyst - Caxton FX

For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Wednesday, 23 February 2011

Minutes revealed to muted reception

So, as the market had more or less anticipated, a third MPC member has jumped on the hawkish bandwagon. In the BoE minutes, released today, it was revealed that Spencer Dale was the latest member to recognise the threat of rising inflation, throwing his hat in the ring with arch hawk Andrew Sentance and Martin Weale in voting for an immediate interest rate rise.

Much of this had already been priced into the market as analysts deciphered clues from speeches given throughout the last few weeks; in particular Mervyn King’s acknowledgement last week that there was an unusually diverse array of opinions amongst the Committee.

Perhaps then the market was slightly underwhelmed when the results showed a 3-6 split, with sterling briefly enjoying a knee jerk boost before dropping back again against the euro. The pound did however enjoy a rally against the US dollar as the minutes firmed opinion that the Bank of England will raise rates sooner than the Federal Reserve on the back of inflationary pressures, which partially offset ongoing concerns about political tensions in the Middle East and North Africa.

The minutes also revealed that Sentance on this occasion stuck his neck out and ramped up his argument that inflation poses a far bigger risk than the bank is willing to recognise by voting for a 0.50% increase in the base rate as opposed to the more traditional 0.25%. The standard pre-release rumours had covered this eventuality so again there wasn’t too much made of his vote and it’s unlikely to prove any more of a compelling argument for those policymakers still sitting on the fence.

With the hype and drama of the minutes now passed the market’s focus will shift to Friday where the UK’s second estimate of fourth quarter GDP is due. At an initial estimate of -0.5%, most are hoping that there may be an upward revision. However, even if there is it is unlikely to be greater than a factor of 0.2%, leaving the figure in contractionary territory, much to the discomfort of sterling bulls who appear to be losing their preeminent position!

Edward Knox
Analyst - Caxton FX

For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Thursday, 17 February 2011

Sentance gives sterling a boost

It seems that this interest rate saga is keeping the market on tenterhooks, with a new twist hitting the headlines this morning. In a nice follow up to my recent blog, the story continued today as Andrew Sentance, a resident hawk in the MPC, more or less rebuffed Governor King’s speech which claimed that the market was “getting ahead of itself” in anticipating an interest rate hike.

In response sterling recouped some of its losses from yesterday, up against most of its major counterparts as Sentance slammed the Central Bank’s economic forecasts, accusing them of understated inflation risks. In his most outspoken attack yet, Sentance made clear his view on the Central Bank’s poor track record in forecasting inflation, and suggested that monetary policy would most likely need to be tightened faster and “more than the markets currently expect” to combat record inflation.

Sentance argued that raising interest rates would bolster the value of the pound, which would help to offset the rising cost of imported commodities – a key contributing factor to the doubling of the banks inflation target.

Although this morning’s comments will no doubt have offered support for sterling, the underlying problems of high unemployment and low real wages may well be reflected in tomorrow’s retail sales data. The market then will now look forward to the MPC minutes, which will be released on Wednesday with baited breath: will we see a third vote in favour of a rate rise? Not just yet would be my guess.

Edward Knox
Analyst - Caxton FX


For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Wednesday, 16 February 2011

Sterling dives on dovish sentiment

Britain’s Consumer Price Index came out yesterday morning with the news that inflation is indeed at 4% - confirmation that inflation is now double the Bank of England’s target rate of 2%.

Having received the news that inflation had hit a 2 year high, and with traders anticipating a near-term interest rate hike, the pound duly rallied across the board.

Today was however a different matter. In a press conference this morning to discuss the recent inflation data, King was typically downbeat on the prospect of raising rates, cooling market expectation with his dovish tone. He alluded to the idea that the Bank may well keep interest rates at a record low to aid the recovery which is “unlikely to be smooth”. He followed this up with clarification that policy makers haven’t actually preannounced an interest-rate increase, suggesting that the market may have “run ahead of themselves”.

The bank today forecast that inflation will quicken from a 2 year high and peak at 4.4% before easing to its 2% target in mid 2012. This came amongst downgrades on its growth forecast.

On this news, an already twitchy market saw the pound fall against all of its major counterparts.

Some in the market then will reconsider whether UK rates will rise as early as mid-year. We will see a fuller picture when the bank releases the minutes from its recent inflation report meeting next week. The MPC members have a tough job in balancing higher inflation with weak economic growth, with King rightly acknowledging that “if you don’t see differences of view in this kind of situation, when ever would you find them?” What is certain, is that the BoE will have to raise interest rates at some point, the market will now however have to reassess when they will pull the trigger with King giving no hints away on timing.

Edward Knox
Analyst - Caxton FX

For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx and sign up to our daily report.

Thursday, 27 January 2011

Is this a blip, or the beginnings of a double-dip?

It seems from yesterday's MPC minutes – the meeting to which was crucially held prior to the release of our shock GDP figure - that the balance of power between the hawks and the doves has shifted. The idea of raising interest rates to combat rising inflation - estimates of which reach to 5% by end of the year thanks to the triple whammy of high energy prices, import costs and the VAT rise - is increasingly on the agenda.

The anticipation of raising interest rates was enough to boost sterling at the beginning of the month. However, with negative economic growth, stagflation is fast becoming the new buzzword and any further rally for sterling has been well and truly checked. 

Imagine if you will, if on the 13th January, the 9 member committee had voted for a quarter point increase in the base rate. Borrowing costs on the rise, just as the word double-dip is reintroduced to every editor trying to flog their paper. Panic? Probably, yes.

To this end King was probably correct in keeping monetary policy loose, at least for now. After all, how is a UK based rate rise going to curb rising fuel and food costs exactly? 

King is walking a very fine line at the moment; keeping interest rates low for too long could inevitably lead to longer term problems for the economy; raising them too early and what little confidence there is in an already weak economy would be eroded.

To be fair, the paper floggers may be jumping on the bandwagon to a certain extent; are we facing a double dip? Not yet, at least not technically – we would need to see 2 quarters of consecutive contraction first. The GDP figure that is causing all this mischief for the pound (as I detailed in my previous blog post) could still be revised up. The weather, the volatile nature of data when emerging from recession, and the fact that the 0.5% figure only accounted for 40% of surveys issued heightens the possibility that the figure will be revised. The second estimate (not due until Feb 25th) could offer a more uplifting figure for the policy members to get their teeth stuck into. The pound meanwhile hangs in the balance.

Edward Knox

Analyst

For the latest forex news and views, follow us on twitter @caxtonfx, and sign up to our daily report.