The Bank of England Inflation Report - May - So when will rates rise? Q2 2015 still the best bet. The final whistle not for some time yet! The Bank of England Inflation Report was released this week. It was all so predictable. The Governor’s opening remarks explained, “The overall outlook for GDP growth and inflation in this report is little changed from February. The UK economy continues to perform strongly. Having increased by more than 3% in the past year, output is now close to regaining the pre-crisis level. 700,000 more people are in work than a year ago and inflation is below, but close to, the 2% target. And so it proved. The strong labour market performance continued into April. The claimant count rate fell by 25,000, to a rate of 3.3%. The wider LFS data (to March) also reflected the improvement with a fall in the overall rate to 6.8%. On current trends the job centres really will be closing in 2017! The MPC expectations are for growth to increase by 3.2% in the second quarter and by 3.4% for the year as a whole, with continued expansion in household spending. Spending will be supported by an increase in real wages as inflation remains close to target and earnings increase moderately, with a gradual improvement in productivity. The MPC obsession with spare capacity continues. “While there is a range of views on the Committee, the best collective judgement is the margin of spare capacity is around 1% to 1.5% of GDP.” Charlie Bean is not entirely convinced about the “fuzzy concept” of spare capacity. “There is a real danger of spurious precision and the pretence of knowledge in this area” said the Deputy Governor. Quite so. That and many others perhaps! Does spare capacity impact on inflation prospects? Not so much. International inflationary pressures are key to current price trends and for the moment remain subdued. “The global picture is consistent with muted external inflationary pressures which, coupled with sterling’s appreciation, will moderate CPI inflation in the near term” said the Governor. Inflation has fallen sharply since the Autumn and the outlook for inflation in the medium term remains benign. A benign inflation outlook which will avoid undue pressure, in the short term, to increase rates, despite the strong growth figures and the buoyant housing market. So what of rates? The strength of the recovery has moved the economy “closer to the point at which interest rates will have to rise”, the official statement. So when will rates rise? In February, the MPC were happy to attach some credence to the market view that rates would begin to rise in the second quarter of next year. If anything the view in May is slightly more “dovish” or certainly more obtuse. “Our guidance is giving businesses and households confidence that we won’t take risks with price stability, financial stability, or the incipient expansion. It will promote the recovery in business investment, productivity and real wages, that a sustained expansion demands.” Rates are still unlikely to move until the second quarter of next year, the implication. As we explained last week, the MPC will be reluctant to move ahead of the Fed and the ECB. Forward guidance then lapsed into sporting analogy as the governor explained : “Securing the recovery is like making it through the qualifying rounds of the World Cup. That is an achievement but not the ultimate goal. The real tournament is just beginning and the prize is a strong, sustained and balanced expansion.” Yes the the Governor is laying out his team formation for the tournament ahead . “A flat back four with growth, inflation, unemployment and borrowing all heading in the right direction. Two strikers up front, household spending, with support to come from business investment. Some confusion in mid field from the housing market but no mention of exports and rebalancing. So expect the odd own goal from the trade performance, errant on the wing, as we move into the final stages of the competition. The Governor, for now, is not “taking away the punchbowl as the match gets going”. Far from it, you may continue to consume alcohol on the terraces, well into the final stages. Base rates are not expected to rise anytime soon. Q2 next year still the best bet. The final whistle will not be blown for some time yet.” So what happened to sterling this week? The pound closed broadly unchanged against the dollar at $1.683 from $1.685 and up against the Euro at 1.227 (1.224). The dollar closed at 1.370 from 1.375 against the euro and at 101.54 (101.18) against the Yen. Oil Price Brent Crude closed up at $109.91 from $108.16. The average price in May last year was $102.3. Markets, the Dow closed down at 16,447 from 16,544 but the FTSE closed up at 6,855 from 6,821. The markets are set to move, the push before the summer rush. UK Ten year gilt yields closed at 2.56 (2.68) and US Treasury yields closed at 2.51 from 2.62. Gold moved up slightly $1,293 from $1,287. That’s all for this week. Join the mailing list for The Saturday Economist or forward to a friend. John © 2014 The Saturday Economist by John Ashcroft and Company. Experience worth sharing. The material is based upon information which we consider to be reliable but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied upon as such. We accept no liability for errors, or omissions of opinion or fact. In particular, no reliance should be placed on the comments on trends in financial markets. The receipt of this email should not be construed as the giving of investment advice.
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Next week the ONS will release the first estimate of GDP for Q1 2014. Expectations are for growth in the UK to be between 3% and 3.3% for the first three months of the year. The UK will be the fastest growing country in the developed world. A soggy start to the year may have damaged hopes in Washington to a claim on the title. Our own forecasts, realised last month, are at the bottom end of the range at just 3%. The Chancellor is creating a great platform in the run up to the election. Growth up, inflation down, employment up, borrowing down. Just the trade figures will continue to disappoint. The Osborne model for “austerity in recovery” may provide the textbook examples for the revisionist theory in the years to come. Four out of five rabbits ain’t so bad! The good news continued this week … Car Manufacturing According to the SMMT, car manufacturing picked up the pace in March as home and export markets improved significantly. UK car production rose 12% in the month to 142,158 units, bringing year to date growth to 2.9%. Good news for the UK’s volume manufacturers as European demand for cars strengthens. Not so good for the balance of payments. The growth in output will do little to offset the strength in domestic sales. New car registrations increased by 14% in the first three months of the year. Government Borrowing Better news on borrowing. Public sector borrowing totalled £107.7bn in the financial year. The out turn is £7.5bn lower than the £115.1bn borrowed in the prior year. Receipts were up by 4% with expenditure increasing by just 1%. The trend is heading in the right direction. The OBR expect borrowing to fall to £95 billion over the next twelve months and £75 billion in the following year. At the end of March 2014, public sector debt excluding temporary effects of financial interventions was £1,268.7 billion, equivalent to 75.8% of gross domestic product. Net debt has doubled since the end of the 2008/9 financial year. Retail Sales Even better news. Retail sales in March increased by 4.2% in volume and by 3.9% in value terms. Average prices of goods sold in March 2014 showed deflation of 0.5%. Fuel once again provided the greatest contribution to the fall in prices. The figures are consistent with the latest CPI data. But as we warned last week, oil prices Brent Crude Basis are now tracking ahead of last years levels for April and May. The deflationary shock may well be over. Domestic earnings are rising and world commodity prices are turning as the world and European recovery particularly, gathers momentum. Online sales were strong once again. The amount spent online increased by 7.1% in March 2014 compared with March last year. On line sales now account for almost 11% of total sales with a marked growth in food sales on line, increasing by almost 14%. Corporate Strategy Series Watch out for our Amazon case study coming soon. Over the Easter holidays, we released the second in our international corporate strategy series. The LEGO case study, follows on from the Apple Case Study originally developed for the Business School in Manchester. The third in the trilogy, Amazon will be released next month. Amazon is a great case study in how to grow (or how not to grow) an online business. Amazon with losses in 2000 of $1.4 billion on sales of $2.8 billion is probably the greatest example yet of a turnaround from burn rate to earn rate. How long can the Amazon model continue to grow? Is there much point in delivering salads in Seattle as part of the Amazon Fresh programme? Watch out for news of the release date.] So what happened to sterling this week? The pound closed up against the dollar at $1.681 from $1.679 and unchanged at 1.215 against the Euro. The dollar closed at 1.382 from 1.382 against the euro and at 102.15 (102.42) against the Yen. Oil Price Brent Crude closed at $109.54 from $109.76. The average price in April last year was $101.2. Markets, the Dow closed down slightly at 16,370 from 16,408 and the FTSE also closed up at 6,685 from 6,625. The markets will have to rally soon, if we are to sell in May and go away! UK Ten year gilt yields closed at 2.66 (2.70) and US Treasury yields closed at 2.67 from 2.72. Gold moved up to $1,301 from $1,293. That’s all for this week. Join the mailing list for The Saturday Economist or forward to a friend. John © 2014 The Saturday Economist by John Ashcroft and Company. Experience worth sharing. The material is based upon information which we consider to be reliable but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied upon as such. We accept no liability for errors, or omissions of opinion or fact. In particular, no reliance should be placed on the comments on trends in financial markets. The receipt of this email should not be construed as the giving of investment advice. Janet Yellen was speaking at the Economic Club of New York this week. Three big questions continue to dominate policy formulation at the Federal Reserve. Unemployment, inflation and factors which may push the recovery off track. Actually, that’s more than three but … According to the Fed forecasts, US unemployment is set to fall to around 5.5% by the end of 2016 and inflation will hover just below 2%. “The economy would be approaching maximum employment and price stability for the first time in nearly a decade”. That's NICE! And what of interest rates? “Economic conditions, may for some time warrant keeping short term interest rates below levels the Committee views as likely to prove normal in the longer run”. The markets reacted well. The Dow moved up and the dollar moved down. Sterling moved to $1.679. In March, the Fed chair had given a clear indication that rates would start to rise in the first quarter of 2015. Less than a month later, there was no such clarity. Rates will be on hold until the recovery is well established. As long as it takes. Unemployment rate, the measure of momentum that really matters, to the doves at the Fed. Exogenous Shocks Nowhere in the speech did the “Capsid Bug” feature. According to a report in The Times today, black pod disease and capsid bug infestations are ravaging cocoa crops in West Africa. This shock to supply plus the surging demand from Chinese Chocaholics is causing a cocoa pop. Cocoa beans have jumped in price from $2,680 per tonne in January to over $3,000 per tonne in March. There could be a 115,000 tonne shortfall in supply this year. By next Easter, we may well be eating smaller eggs which cost much more. So much for the threat of world deflation! Does this matter? Well yes. The collapse of the Peruvian anchovy crop in 1972/3 was claimed by many to herald the onset of the hyper inflationary episode of the seventies. OK, the Russian grain famine, the onset of OPEC and the quadrupling of oil prices assisted considerably. But the message is, exogenous shocks from commodity prices can have a greater impact on domestic inflation. Much greater than the Phillips curve paradigm, much beloved by the FOMC, provides. This is clearly demonstrated in the UK economics data released this week. Inflation is falling, employment is rising. World prices mitigated by the appreciation of Sterling are marking the price changes. UK Inflation Inflation CPI basis slowed to 1.6% in March from 1.7% in the prior month. Goods inflation fell to 1.0% and service sector inflation fell to 2.3% (2.4%). Oil related transport costs were dominant in the slow down. Manufacturing output prices increased by just 0.5% as input costs actually fell by 6.5%. The fall in crude oil prices, imported metals, parts and equipment largely explained the fall. Sterling appreciation assisted the process. Sterling averaged $1.66 in March this year compared to $1.51 last year. A 10% appreciation assisting the “deflationary process” significantly. [Oil prices Brent crude basis averaged $108 approximately in both months]. So what of employment? Unemployment figures - Jobcentres will be closing by the end of 2016 Unemployment fell to 6.9% in the three months to February to a level of 2.24 million. This is below the level originally outlined in the Bank of England Forward Guidance in August last year. 7.0% the level at which the Bank would begin to consider an increase in base rates. The claimant count fell by 30,000 to a level of 1.142 million. Over the last three months, the count has fallen by 100,000 and almost 400,000 over the last twelve months. If current rates persist, the labour market will fall to pre recession levels towards the end of the year. By the end of 2016, No one will be left on the list. So this is what they mean by full employment! Jobcentres will have to close! The implications for earnings are evident. Already in February, whole economy earnings increased by 1.9% and wages in manufacturing and construction increased by 3%. We expect a significant acceleration in earnings throughout the year as the labour market tightens considerably. As for base rates, Yellen is signalling the US rates will be kept on hold well into 2015. The Bank of England may well have no such luxury. The MPC will be reluctant to raise rates ahead of the Fed. If this were to happen, despite the inherent structural weakness on trade and the current account, sterling will continue to rise significantly. $1.73 the next target? So what happened to sterling this week? The pound closed at $1.679 from $1.673 and at 1.215 from 1.204 against the Euro. The dollar closed at 1.382 from 1.3389 against the euro and at 102.42 against the Yen. Oil Price Brent Crude closed at $109.76 from $107.70. The average price in April last year was $101.2. The energy kicker to falling prices may well be over. Markets, the Dow closed up at 16,408 from 16,086and the FTSE also closed up at 6,625 from 6,561. UK Ten year gilt yields closed at 2.70 (2.60) and US Treasury yields closed at 2.72 from 2.62. Gold moved lower to $1,293 from $1,318. The pattern is bullish for equities.. That’s all for this week. Join the mailing list for The Saturday Economist or forward to a friend. John © 2014 The Saturday Economist by John Ashcroft and Company. Experience worth sharing. The material is based upon information which we consider to be reliable but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied upon as such. We accept no liability for errors, or omissions of opinion or fact. In particular, no reliance should be placed on the comments on trends in financial markets. The receipt of this email should not be construed as the giving of investment advice. Car sales soar but so will the trade deficit … Good news of the recovery. Car registrations rose to 465,000 in March, an increase of 18% on last year. The new 2014 plates have been great for the car market. More new cars were registered last month, than at any time in the last ten years according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders. As Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive explains. “Given the past six years of subdued economic performance across the UK, there is still a substantial margin of pent-up demand, contributing to a strong new and used car market.” Easy finance deals and advanced technologies make new cars cheaper to buy and to run. There has never been a better time to buy a new car. The pent up demand is to be unleashed. Bear in mind, we have over 31 million cars on the road in the UK, of which over one third are over nine years old. Let’s hope the owners don’t all appear in the showroom at once.That would create a traffic jam at the docks. The car market demonstrates clearly the problems with the march of the makers, the rebalancing agenda and the inability of sterling depreciation to remedy the trade balance. We expect car sales to increase to around 2.5 million units in 2014 returning to levels last seen in 2004 and 2005. Production is forecast to increase to 1.6 million units following the increase to 1.5 million last year. A further increase to 1.7 million units, then 1.8 million units is expected by 2016. Good news for manufacturing? Of course. But the majority of production is exported. Export sales may hit 1.3 million units in 2014, rising to 1.5 million by 2016. As a result, imports will have to increase to 2.2 million units in 2014, rising to 2.4 million units by 2016 to satisfy domestic demand. The trade deficit (unit sales) will increase to 0.8 or 0.9 million units. An increase to levels least seen pre recession. The recovery in the UK economy will exacerbate the trade deficit in cars just as it will in many other commodities. Relative rates of economic growth here and particularly in Europe primarily determine the demand for imports and exports. Demand is relatively inelastic with regard to price, particularly with exports. Manufacturers price to market or products form part of international syndication. Sterling has a minor role to play in determining the direction of trade in the international car market. Supply, is output constrained and cannot respond to domestic market growth. In fact 80% of car production is exported and 90% of domestic demand is satisfied by imports. We have warned previously, the UK cannot grow faster than trade partners in Europe or North America without a deterioration in the trade account. The car market is a simple arithmetic of the dilemma. Download the short report Car Market - Driving recovery or driving the deficit to access the underlying data. PMI Markit Surveys This is the week of the PMI Markit survey data with information on the March updates. The recovery continues in services, construction and manufacturing. The manufacturing upturn remains solid, service sector activity remains strong and construction firms report brightest outlook for business activity since January 2007. We have upgraded our forecast for UK growth this year to 2.9% based on the strength of the Manchester Index® and latest GM Chamber of Commerce QES survey data. House Prices, Nationwide reports house prices increasing by 9.5% across the UK, increasing by 18% in London. Prices remain slightly below the peak levels of 2007 except in the capital, were levels are now some 20% above peak. Should we worry about the boom in prices? Perhaps but not just yet. Activity levels are still subdued relative to the pre recession peaks but the recovery in prices will be of concern to policy makers as will the developing trade deficit. In our economics presentations we begin to touch on concerns about the recovery. Deflation is not one of them, house prices may be. The current account deficit certainly is. Especially if the trends in investment income from overseas are maintained. Then we shall see just what will happen to sterling. So what happened to sterling this week? The pound closed at $1.659 from $1.664 and at 1.21 unchanged against the Euro. The dollar closed at 1.370 from 1.375 against the euro and at 103.26 from 102.82against the Yen. Oil Price Brent Crude closed at $106.72 from $108.01. The average price in March last year was $108. Markets, the Dow closed up at 16,526 from 16,323 and the FTSE closed at 6,6956 from 6,615. UK Ten year gilt yields closed at 2.72 (2.72) and US Treasury yields closed at 2.76 from 2.72. Gold moved higher to $1,304 from $1,293. That’s all for this week. Join the mailing list for The Saturday Economist or forward to a friend. John © 2014 The Saturday Economist by John Ashcroft and Company. Experience worth sharing. The material is based upon information which we consider to be reliable but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied upon as such. We accept no liability for errors, or omissions of opinion or fact. In particular, no reliance should be placed on the comments on trends in financial markets. The receipt of this email should not be construed as the giving of investment advice. Good news in the car market but the higher level of sales will drive the trade deficit higher - no rebalancing on the road ahead. Download the file here. The new 14 plates have been great for the car market. Registrations in March were 465,000, up by 18% on March last year. UK car registration increased by 15% in the first three months of 2014. We forecast total sales of almost 2.5 million this year, returning to levels of sales, last seen in 2004 and 2005. Production is forecast to increase to 1.6 million units following the increase to 1.5 million last year. A further increase to 1.7 million units, then 1.8 million units is expected by 2016. Good news? Of course. But the majority of production is exported. Export sales may hit 1.3 million units in 2014, rising to 1.5 million by 2016. As a result, imports will have to increase to 2.2 million units in 2014, rising to 2.4 million units by 2016. The trade deficit (unit sales) will increase to 0.8 million units, to the levels least seen pre recession. The surge in car sales is a welcome demonstration of UK demand. As Mike Hawes, SMMT Chief Executive explains. “Given the past six years of subdued economic performance across the UK, there is still a substantial margin of pent-up demand that is contributing to a strong new and used car market.” The pent up demand is to be unleashed. Remember we have over 31 million cars on the road in the UK of which over one third are over nine years old. Easy finance deals and advanced technologies make new cars cheaper to buy and to run. There has never been a better time to buy a new car. Let’s hope they don’t all rush at once. That would create a traffic jam at the docks. That’s another reason why we say the trade figures will continue to disappoint, and threaten the recovery, especially if the collapse in investment income continues. Download the short report here. UK Balance of Payments 2013 - Current Account Deficit could be a real threat to recovery. Download the full report. In 2013, overseas investment earnings collapsed and the trade deficit persisted. The UK current account deficit was over 4% of GDP. This has happened in only two years since the 1950s. The first time was in 1974 and the second time was in 1989. In each of the two years, UK base rates were hiked to 12% and 14% respectively. In 1976 the IMF paid a visit to assist with funding. We do not know as yet if the fall in investment returns last year was a blip or a statistical error which may be reversed in due course. We do know that if the trends in investment income continue, the UK will face a balance of payments problem of Tsunami proportions. Capital outflows would become difficult to finance - international investors already own 30% of the gilt market and over 50% of quoted stocks. Forward guidance would be of little value in the enforced knee jerk reaction required. International - not domestic developments would force base rates higher. The Bank of England would have to act to prop up sterling. “A new generation of economists will have to come to grips with the terminology of a balance of payments crisis, a run on sterling and the concept of the balance of payments as a constraint to growth.” In this short report, we analyse the UK balance of payments from 1955 to the current day. Developments in the current account, particularly in investment income, if continued, will present a real challenge to recovery and growth in the UK. Download a copy of the report here. Download a copy of the Keynote Files Here. |
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The material is based upon information which we consider to be reliable but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied upon as such. We accept no liability for errors, or omissions of opinion or fact. In particular, no reliance should be placed on the comments on trends in financial markets. The presentation should not be construed as the giving of investment advice.
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