Tuesday, 17 May 2011

Sterling fails to sustain gains after sharp inflation rise

One would expect a 0.5% surge in a headline inflation figure which was already double the BoE’s official target to give sterling a genuine and sustained boost. This has not been the case today, sterling has erased the pretty decent gains it made in the build up to the data release, to trade flat on the day presently.


Why? There seems to be a feeling that UK inflation can go as high as it likes (within reason!), the UK economy is just too flimsy to take a rise in borrowing costs. The subsequent BoE letter to Chancellor George Osborne pointed to the economic risks of bringing UK inflation back down to target quickly. There was definitely a sense that the BoE will wait, or given little option to wait until the very end of the year at the earliest.

Sterling is benefitting from the current euro-weakness at present but if and when this Greek issue is swept under the carpet for another year, it seems likely that the awful sentiment towards the UK economy could weigh on sterling moving forward.

In the very short-term, sterling can look to tomorrow’s UK unemployment data, MPC minutes, and Thursday’s UK retail sale data. I’m tempted to think not even a hawkish minutes will convince the market it is genuinely considering raising rates before the end of the year. On a more positive note, UK retail sales are forecast to improve significantly. However, a strong figure will only be a starting point I’m afraid, market participants will require a lot more.

Richard Driver
Analyst – Caxton FX


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