![]() The prospect of a UK base rate rise before the end of the year receded this week with the release of latest data on inflation and earnings … Retail Prices … Retail price inflation CPI basis slowed to 1.5% in August from 1.6% prior month. Falls in the prices of motor fuels and food provided the largest downward contributions to the change in the rate. Markets expect CPI inflation to average 1.7% over the final quarter of the year, significantly below the MPC benchmark 2% target. Don’t worry about deflation too much, service sector inflation actually increased to a rate 2.7%, as goods inflation fell to 0.6%. Manufacturing Prices … Manufacturing output prices actually fell in August, down by -0.3% compared to a fall of -0.1% in July. Input costs, price of materials and fuels bought by UK manufacturers, fell -7.2% in the year to August, compared with a fall of -7.5% in the year to July. Crude oil costs were down by 14% as price of energy and import costs generally benefited from the weakness of world commodity and trade prices. The appreciation of Sterling helped, up by 8% against the dollar in the month. Home food material costs were down by -10%. Evidence that weak food prices at retail level are not really attributable to supermarket food wars after all. For the moment, inflation, or lack of it, is always and everywhere an international phenomenon. World trade prices are weak. Oil price Brent Crude is trading below $100 per barrel compared to $112 last year. Sterling closed at $1.63 this week up by just 3% compared to September last year. A warning perhaps, the currency contribution may be eroding and the dramatic fall in manufacturing costs may soon be reversed. Unemployment data … The number of people unemployed, claimant count basis fell below 1 million in August, the actual figure was 966,500 and a rate of 2.9%. Over the last six months over 200,000 have left the register. At this rate, job centres will be closing by the end of 2017, there will be no one looking for work. Despite the surging jobs market, pay data remains remarkably weak. Average earnings increased by 0.7% in July. Surprising given the rate of jobs growth. Some evidence of compression is more evident in manufacturing pay, up almost 2% and construction, up by 4%. Retail Sales ... Retail sales rallied in August as volumes increased by 3.9% year on year and values increased by 2.7%. Online sales volumes were up by 8.3% accounting for 11% of all retail transactions. Households are spending and will continue to do so. The August ©GfK Consumer Confidence Barometer confirms households are more optimistic, feel better off and believe it is a good time to spend. So what of base rates …? Janet Yellen, head of the Fed, gave additional guidance on the direction of US rates this week. “The Committee currently anticipates that economic conditions may, for some time, warrant keeping the target federal funds rate below levels the Committee views as normal in the longer run”. “A highly accommodative stance remains appropriate”. There was no real change in the police stance. Markets rallied and the Dow closed above 17,000. Analysts do not expect a rate rise in the USA before June next year. So what does this mean for UK rates? Weak growth in Europe, monetary accommodation in the US, low inflation and earnings data in the UK, will push the increase in UK base rates into 2015. Despite the schism on the committee, the MPC will be reluctant to move ahead of the Fed. No escape from Planet ZIRP just yet, we may regret the delayed take off in the years ahead. So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling rallied against the dollar to $1.630 from $1.626 and well up against the Euro at 1.270 from 1.254. The Euro was down against the dollar at 1.270 (1.297). Oil Price Brent Crude closed down at $98.08 from $97.62. The average price in September last year was $111.60. Markets, move up. The Dow closed at 17,291 from 16,978 and the FTSE closed down at 6,837 from 6,806. UK Ten year gilt yields moved 2.55 from 2.49 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.62 from 2.60. Gold drifted lower at $1,218 from $1,227. 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. Economics, Strategy and Social Media ... Experience worth sharing. Disclaimer 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. 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![]() No surprise this week as MPC votes to hold rates … It’s that time of month again …The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee voted to maintain Bank Rate at 0.5%. The Committee also voted to maintain the stock of purchased assets at £375 billion. The minutes of the meeting will be published on the 17 September. Can’t wait! The hawks views may have been subdued by the latest data on retail sales and earnings data but the economics news this week remains bullish about growth this year. Car Sales … Car sales in August were up by 9% in the month and just over 10% in the year to date. The UK is on track to sell 2.45 million cars this year. That’s higher than the pre crash levels recorded in 2007. Commercial vehicle sales were up almost 12% in August, increasing by 13% for the year to date. The car market remains a powerful indicator of consumer confidence and spending trends. August, with registrations of just 72,000, is no longer a big month for sales. September is the one to watch with over 400,000 new car sales recorded last year, 425,000 a hurdle number! UK Survey Data … The Markit/CIPS UK PMI® surveys for August were released this week. Chris Williamson, Chief Economist at Markit, claimed “An acceleration of growth in the services sector and an on-going construction boom offset a weakened performance in manufacturing in August. The three PMI surveys indicate that the economy grew at the fastest rate since last November, providing further ammunition for policymakers arguing for higher interest rates.” In the service sector, activity growth was the strongest for ten months. The headline Business Activity Index recorded 60.5 up from 59.1 in July, representing the sharpest monthly improvement in activity since October 2013. In the construction sector, output appears to have risen at the fastest pace for seven months. The key index recorded a level of 64.0 in the month, up from 62.4 in July. Residential construction posted the fastest growth in activity. News from the manufacturing sector disappointed slightly. The Manufacturing PMI index posted 52.5 in August, down from 54.8 in July. Albeit a 14 month low, the index is still in growth (above 50) territory. Domestic sales dominate, export demand is strong in North America, the Middle East and China but obvious problems in European order books persist. So what of the rest of the world? US jobs disappoint but Fed still on track to tighten … The US labour market added 142,000 new jobs in August, significantly below consensus expectations and well below the 225,000 average over the prior six months. The unemployment rate fell to 6.1%. Positive news on car sales and manufacturing output also hit the headlines … “The data doesn’t say the economy is slowing down but it does not suggest it is accelerating much either” according to Steven Blitz chief economist at ITG Investment Research. Nor we would add, is there much in the data to suggest the Fed will stray from the path of gently monetary tightening in the first half of 2015. In Europe … The ECB adopted further measures in an attempt to stimulate the slow recovery and low inflation in the Eurozone. Growth in Q2 increased by 0.7% compared with Q2 last year with some evidence of a slow down in Germany. Inflation fell to 0.3% and unemployment remained stubbornly high at 11.5%. The ECB lowered policy rates by 10 basis points, the refinancing rate moved down to 0.05%, the marginal lending facility fell to 0.3% and the deposit rate was pushed further into negative territory, dropping to -0.2%. No escape from Planet ZIRP in prospect! Despite the concerns about deflation, GDP is forecast to increase by 0.9% in 2014 and 1.6% in 2015. Low prices are an international phenomenon, not confined to Europe. Negative rates and QE are unlikely to provide the solution to low commodity prices. A slow for recovery for Europe is in prospect. Marooned on Planet ZIRP, digging up the runway will not improve the timetable for takeoff and escape. There is an old Iberian imprecation, “May the builders be in your home”. Far worse - the curse “May the academics be in your central bank”. So what of base rates … In the UK base rates were held at 50 basis points with no additions to the asset purchase programme. The chances of a rate rise before the end of the year are receding. Hot money is moving to February for the first rate hike but if the bad news from Europe continues, the hike may be post hustings after all. Is this at odds with the latest data? Of course. Demand conditions are strong, the labour market is tightening, recruitment challenges are increasing and skill shortages are ubiquitous. Pay and earnings remain subdued and international energy and commodity prices remain low. For the moment the inflation target remains within reach, easing the grip of the hawks on monetary policy. So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling fell against the dollar to $1.630 from $1.658 and down against the Euro at 1.259 from 1.261. The Euro was down against the dollar at 1.295 (1.314). Oil Price Brent Crude closed down at $100.98 from 102.19. The average price in September last year was $111.60. Markets, move up slightly. The Dow closed up at 17,103 from 17,084 and the FTSE closed up at 6,855 from 6,819. UK Ten year gilt yields move up to 2.49 from 2.37 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.44 from 2.33. Gold was slightly tarnished at $1,265 from $1,286. That’s all for this week but we would like to introduce the Bracken Bower Prize to our readers! John Introducing the Bracken Bower Prize The Financial Times and McKinsey & Company, organisers of the Business Book of the Year Award, want to encourage young authors to tackle emerging business themes. They hope to unearth new talent and encourage writers to research ideas that could fill future business books of the year. A prize of £15,000 will be given for the best book proposal. The Bracken Bower Prize is named after Brendan Bracken who was chairman of the FT from 1945 to 1958 and Marvin Bower, managing director of McKinsey from 1950 to 1967, who were instrumental in laying the foundations for the present day success of the two institutions. This prize honours their legacy but also opens a new chapter by encouraging young writers and researchers to identify and analyse the business trends of the future. The inaugural prize will be awarded to the best proposal for a book about the challenges and opportunities of growth. The main theme of the proposed work should be forward-looking. In the spirit of the Business Book of the Year, the proposed book should aim to provide a compelling and enjoyable insight into future trends in business, economics, finance or management. The judges will favour authors who write with knowledge, creativity, originality and style and whose proposed books promise to break new ground, or examine pressing business challenges in original ways. Only writers who are under 35 on November 11 2014 (the day the prize will be awarded) are eligible. They can be a published author, but the proposal itself must be original and must not have been previously submitted to a publisher. The proposal should be no longer than 5,000 words – an essay or an article that conveys the argument, scope and style of the proposed book – and must include a description of how the finished work would be structured, for example, a list of chapter headings and a short bullet-point description of each chapter. In addition entrants should submit a biography, emphasising why they are qualified to write a book on this topic. The best proposals will be published on FT.com. Full rules for The Bracken Bower prize are available here or here http://membership.ft.com/PR/brackenbower/ © 2014 The Saturday Economist by John Ashcroft and Company : Economics, Corporate Strategy and Social Media ... 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. ![]() Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day Teach a man to fish - and you feed him for a lifetime! Yep - The old proverbs are great at summation but sometimes over looking the broader implications of the proposition. For the fisherman, thrusting a rod into hands is not enough. We have to preserve fish stocks, avoid pollution and ensure the piscators have a boat to reach the offshore shoals. A bit of international regulation helps, to guarantee the floating fish factories don’t suck away the livelihood of the locals. Yes, you can teach a man to fish but you leave him with nothing more than a stick in his hands and a soft line dangling into empty waters, unless broader policy issues are addressed. The great enemy of the truth is … What has this got to do with economics you may ask? We have to ensure the first principles of any proposition are covered in depth. JFK would say, “The great enemy of truth is very often not the lie - deliberate, contrived and dishonest but the myth - persistent, persuasive and unrealistic.” I feel the same way about QE, as I do about fishing. Allegedly stimulating growth and inflation, QE is a process in which central bankers buy debt from the debt management office underwritten by Treasury. In the UK HMT can then claim back the yield coupon eliminating the cost of debt issuance. It’s “money for nothing, gilts for free” a form of Dire Straits economics, which does little or nothing for growth or inflation. It is a combination of debt monetisation and financial repression. Ten year gilt yields at 2.3% are symptoms of the malaise, a combination of an over long stay on planet ZIRP with a toxic dose of QE, from time to time, in a misguided attempt to sustain life. QE is not the answer for Europe … In the UK, QE, intellectually discredited, came to an abrupt end in 2012. The Fed will terminate the US experiment in October this year. In Japan the nonsense persists. Kuroda, the Governor of the Bank of Japan continues with a QE programme worth $1.4tn (£923bn) despite the damage to the international gilt curve. This is the economy which introduced a sales tax in April, to stimulate inflation, ignoring the impact on demand and output. The impact on revenues muted in the process. In Europe, the torpor of the Euro economy continues, with news of rising employment and falling inflation. The Economist leads with “That Sinking Feeling Again” but what can Draghi do? Interest rates at the floor, Draghi can do no more, than talk down the Euro with a hint of QE to come. Why hold back? The ECB well understand, if there is nothing more powerful than idea whose time has come, there can be nothing more impotent or futile as an idea, for which the time has been and gone. So it is with QE, in part the problem of deflation lies elsewhere …. No Carnival in Brazil … In South America the bad news continues, a technical default in Argentina, major challenges in Venezuela and a down grade of growth forecasts in Brazil to just over 1% this year. An awful lot of coffee but no pick me up in Brazil as the world cup damaged output. Let them eat cacao but not watch football, the lesson from history. The latest data on world trade suggest that growth increased by 3.2% in the second quarter compared to 2.7% in Q1. The US recovery is assisting the process with news of a US GDP revision in the second quarter to growth of 2.5% compared to the earlier estimate of 2.4%. The world is recovering … So what of world prices? Deflation may be the spectre that haunts Europe but world price trends are partly to blame. World trade prices increased by just 0.4% in the second quarter after a fall of 1% in Q1. Oil, energy and commodity prices remain subdued. No rising prices as yet, so rates may be on hold for a bit longer … So what of base rates … Flip flops are becoming the footwear of choice for central bankers. Mark Carney, the unreliable boyfriend, started the fad, closely followed by Janet Yellen, fishing for answers in Wyoming last week. The consensus is for UK rates to rise by 25 basis points in February, as a rate rise before the end of the year is ruled out. So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling closed unchanged against the dollar at $1.658 from $1.657 but up against the Euro at 1.261 from 1.252. The Euro was down against the dollar at 1.314 (1.324). Oil Price Brent Crude closed down at $102.19 from 102.32. The average price in August last year was $111.28. Markets, rallied on the fishing report from Wyoming. The Dow closed up at 17,084 from 17,031 and the FTSE closed up at 6,819 from 6,775. UK Ten year gilt yields slipped to 2.37 from 2.41 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.33 from 2.34. Gold was slightly tarnished at $1,286 from 1,302. That’s all for this week. Join the mailing list for The Saturday Economist or please forward to a friend. John © 2014 The Saturday Economist by John Ashcroft and Company. Economics, Strategy and Social Media ... Experience worth sharing. Disclaimer 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. If you do not wish to receive any further Saturday Economist updates, please unsubscribe using the buttons below or drop me an email at [email protected]. If you enjoy the content, why not forward to a colleague or friend. Or they can sign up here *|MC:SHARE|* ![]() Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Skiing in Winter and Fly Fishing in Summer, there are several perks to the role of central banker. This week the bankers were in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, fishing for answers to the employment - inflation conundrum. The occasion - the Federal Reserve, Kansas City, Economic Symposium, Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Why Wyoming? You may well ask? In 1982 the conference moved to Jackson Hole (Kansas City district) to persuade Paul Volcker, then chairman of the Fed and an avid fly-fisherman, to attend. Flies and fish were the big lure for the head of the Fed - and so it began. The location, based some 2,000 miles from New York and 5,000 miles from London is not ideal. Communication - in the early days - not always ideal either. Want a copy of the New York Times? The local store stocked today’s and yesterday’s but if you wanted today’s copy, you had to come back tomorrow - delivery lagged a day behind. Monetary Policy and the Muddler Minnow* … This year the theme was Labor Market Dynamics and Monetary Policy. Mario Draghi reassured markets there would be no early rise in rates in Europe! Quelle Surprise! Janet Yellen delivered a lecture on structural, cyclical, secular and frictional unemployment before claiming the mantle of Truman’s two handed economist to explain the Fed’s stance on future monetary policy. On the one hand … “If progress in the labor market continues to be more rapid than anticipated or if inflation moves up more rapidly than anticipated, resulting in faster convergence toward our dual objectives, then increases in the federal funds rate target could come sooner than the Committee currently expects and could be more rapid thereafter.” On the other hand … “If economic performance turns out to be disappointing and progress toward our goals proceeds more slowly than we expect, then the future path of interest rates likely would be more accommodative than we currently anticipate.” Excellent. Yellen then left the room, thrust on a pair of waders, tied on a muddler minnow before making an excellent double spey cast into the River Snake. [*The muddler minnow is currently one of the most favoured trout flies amongst central bankers.] The MPC Minutes … muddying the waters … Back in the UK, the Bank of England released the minutes of the August MPC meeting. Two members of the committee, Martin Weale and Ian McCafferty voted for an increase in base rates by 25 basis points. The Carney consensus has cracked. Charm school is out for the Summer. Markets fell, Sterling rallied, on the prospect of an early rate rise. Inflation Update ... The day before, the ONS released the inflation figures for July. CPI fell to 1.6% from 1.9% prior month. Markets had rallied, Sterling fell, prospects of an imminent rate rise postponed. No one seemed to notice that service sector inflation was unchanged at 2.5%. The overall drop in the headline rate - attributable to goods inflation down to 0.8% from 1.4% in June. So why the drop in goods inflation? Manufacturing output prices were flat but input costs fell by over 7% in the month. Effects of sluggish world trade, weak commodity and energy prices were exacerbated by the translation impact of a stronger Sterling. Government Borrowing … Thursday and the ONS released figures on government borrowing for the month of July. Four months into the year and borrowing remains off track compared to last year and to plan. In the first four months, total borrowing was £37.0 billion compared to £35.2 billion in 2013. In July borrowing was down to £0.7 billion from £1.6 billion last year. An improvement but with an economy expanding by over 3% in the first half of the year, we would expect a big improvement in borrowing given the strength of the recovery. Government spending is not the problem, nor VAT receipts up by 5%. The problem is revenues from income and capital gains tax are actually down on prior year over the first four months of the fiscal year. In part this is a result of strong receipts in the first quarter last year which may level out in due course. Compared to two years ago, revenues are up 5%. Even so, for the year as a whole the Chancellor will still have some work to do if the OBR target is to be met. Retail Sales … Retail sales in July were up by 2.6% after growth of 4% in the first half of the year. A disappointment, perhaps. Internet sales were up by 11% accounting for 11% of all retail activity. It will take more than a few digital mannequins to reverse fortunes on the high street but it is a tad to soon to make the call about a slow down in overall activity. The house market remains strong in terms of prices and the Council of Mortgage Lenders reported a 15% increase in gross mortgage leading last month. So what of base rates … The MPC minutes suggested the rate rise could come earlier than expected but news on inflation and retail sales suggest the rates will be kept on hold until 2015. No rate rise in prospect in Europe but Janet Yellen has “nowcast” a muddler minnow into the thought stream. A rate rise in the USA on the cards for Q2 next year or even earlier? Possibly. In the UK - February or June would appear to be the call. So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling closed down against the dollar at $1.657 from $1.669 but up against the Euro at 1.252 from 1.246. The Euro was down against the dollar at 1.324 (1.246). Oil Price Brent Crude closed down at $102.32 from 102.96. The average price in August last year was $111.28. Markets, rallied on the fishing report from Wyoming. The Dow closed up at 17,031 from 16,637 and the FTSE closed up at 6,775 from 6,685. UK Ten year gilt yields were unchanged at 2.41 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.342 from 2.39. Gold was largely unchanged at $1,302. 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. Economics, Corporate Strategy and Social Media ... 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. ![]() The Inflation Report Press Conference … Reassurance from the Inflation Report Press Conference this week. The Bank of England may be uncertain about what is happening in the economy but it is certainly not clueless. Excellent. £3.5 million spent on the economics model and 200 PhDs in the pot to stir up the data, not all is for nought. James Macintosh of the FT put the difficult question “It would appear you've been moving over the past five years from a fair degree of certainty towards a fair degree of cluelessness and currently - you are at the more clueless end of the spectrum.” Is this a fair point? Well perhaps. Larry Elliott of the Guardian had begun the challenge suggesting there's a wide range of views on the Committee about the likely degree of slack in the economy. There is uncertainty about the housing market, wages may go up, they may not go up. Guidance on the pace and extent of interest rate rises is an expectation not a promise … “I mean once you cut through all this doesn't it lead you to three conclusions - one, that the Bank hasn't really got a clue what's going on out there; two, that the MPC is divided about what's going on out there; and thirdly, any person thinking about taking out a mortgage on the basis of the Bank's forward guidance would be ill-advised to do so, because anything you say, has to be taken with a very large pinch of salt?” Oh dear ... The Carney honeymoon is over … Well one thing we can be certain about, this is not the questioning we would have expected under Governor King. For Governor Carney the honeymoon is over. So much for the open routine. The Emperor’s economics models are proving to be as insubstantial as the clothing. Perhaps it is time to return to the enigmatic, grumpy old professor emeritus routine, dismissive of those of a lower intellectual order including undergraduates and the press core particularly. Ed Conway now with Sky News, would occasionally rattle Governor King teasing about the accuracy of the inflation forecasts, (not actually forecasts of course) but Governor Carney,cast in the role as the unreliable boyfriend, is taking more and more hits. All a bit of a muddle … Clearly Asa Bennett From the Huffington Post rattled the Governor, sensitive to criticism of forward guidance, “I just wanted to ask Governor about the evolution of your forward guidance plan, particularly when it started with the sort of clear to understand unemployment threshold, and then the sort of output gap, and then this bolt on about pay growth. Do you wish you started with this at the beginning? Hasn’t it all been a bit of a muddle or is it a learning process? “Well you’re muddled I'm afraid”. The playground retort from the Governor of the Bank of England. So is that the best we can get? The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street - the Aunt Sally of Fleet Street … The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street is becoming the Aunt Sally of Fleet Street. It would help if Jenny Scott, Executive Director of Communications, chairing the press conference, appeared to know some of the names of the press corp, instead of jabbing a pencil in this or that direction, when it came to question time. Perhaps Jenny was trying to ward off evil spirits, waving the magic wand of oblivion, which Governor King carried so successfully in his cloak. For debutante MPC member Minouche Shafik, it was all too much. Shifting uneasily, apparently bored, struggling under the weight, not of office but of a voluminous hair style, the governor allowed Minouche one question response on Europe … Minouche : “It would be good for us if Europe grew faster since it’s our key trading market, but for the near term that doesn’t look very likely”. “That’s all we have time for”, said the Director of Communications and that was that. Well, we must hope there is much more to come. So what happened this week? GDP Estimate … The ONS second estimate of GDP was released this week. Growth in the UK Q2 increased by 3.2% compared to the prior estimate of 3.1%. Actually the numbers hadn’t changed, the statisticians were using a more accurate calculator this time round for the rounding. Our estimates of growth for the year are unchanged at 3% which makes the Bank of England estimates of growth (3.5%) all the more difficult to understand. Either the economy will grow at an eye watering 4% in the second half of the year or the Bank expects big revisions to the data in September as a result of the inclusion of drugs and prostitution in the national accounts. Who would have thought hookers had that much clout. We shall have to wait until the end of September for the update. Labour Market Stats … The jobs outlook just gets better. The claimant count rate fell to 3% in July at just over 1 million unemployed. 400,000 have found work in the past year. At the current rate of growth we will be closing the job centres at the end of 2016, there will be no on left on the register looking for work. The wider LFS data confirmed the trend with the unemployment rate falling to 6.4%. More people in work, unemployment rates falling, recruitment increasing, skills shortages heightening, which makes the pay data even more inexplicable. Earnings increased by less than one per cent in June. We would expect increases in line with inflation or more at 3% plus at this stage in the recovery. For this we have much sympathy with the models at the Bank of England, something strange is happening on Planet ZIRP. Maybe low rates are the problem and no the solution? So what of base rates … Growth and jobs data would push the argument for a rates rise before the end of the year. Inflation and pay data would suggest the rates could be kept on hold until 2015. The latest data from Europe confirms a rate rise is off the agenda for months if not years to come. The MPC will be loathe to act ahead of the Fed and not too eager to move in advance of the ECB. Markets assumed rates will be kept on hold as a result of the Inflation Report… So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling closed down against the dollar at $1.669 from $1.6774 and down against the Euro at 1.246 from 1.252. The Euro was down against the dollar at 1.246 (1.341). Oil Price Brent Crude closed down at $102.96 from 105.02. The average price in August last year was $111.28. Markets, rallied on the rates news. The Dow closed up at 16,637 from 16,554 and the FTSE closed up at 6,685 from 6,567. UK Ten year gilt yields were down at 2.41 from 2.55 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.39 from 2.49. Gold was largely unchanged at $1,303 from $1,305. 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. ![]() UK Interest Rates on hold ... No surprise this week as the MPC voted to keep rates on hold and to maintain the asset purchase facility at £375 billion. The decision to increase rates may becoming more finely balanced for some but the news from around the world, will disturb the hawks and give succour to the doves. The rate rise may well be held over into the new year, despite the continued strong performance of the domestic economy. The minutes of the MPC meeting, due later this month, may provide some insight into the overall views of the individual committee members. ECB and Rates ... problems in the East In Europe, rates were kept on hold as Draghi continues to consider QE. Action is needed but the futile process of debt monetisation will do little to offset the economies beset by weak levels of domestic demand. Complaints against the need for labour reform and excessive regulation will largely miss the point. Italy is slipping back into recession with forecasts for the current year downgraded once again to growth of just 0.2%. France will struggle to hit the 1% growth target this year and German export performance is slowing as economies are transfixed by the crisis in Ukraine. Trade sanctions and threat of war are damaging exports from Euro land to Eastern Europe and to Russia. The Euro trading block is now imperilled by it’s very “raison d’être” at inception. Growth in the Euro economies is expected to be just 1% this year with no prospect of a rate rise on the horizon until late 2015 / 2016 at the earliest. Production and Manufacturing ... In the UK, manufacturing data was surprisingly weak in the latest data for June but Euroland is not to blame. Output increased in the month by just 1.9% after strong growth of 3.6% in the first quarter and 4% in April and May. In the second quarter overall growth was up by 3.2%. The underlying data from the Markit/CIPS Manufacturing PMI® suggests strong growth continued into June and July which suggests the latest ONS data may be something of an aberration. [We are adjusting our forecast for the year to growth in manufacturing of 3.4% based on the latest data. Expectations for UK GDP growth are unchanged at 3% following revisions to our service sector forecast.] The Car Market … The SMMT reported strong car sales in July, with new registrations up by 6% in the month and 10% in the year to date. Output increased by 3.5% over the year. The car market is on track to sell 2.45 million units this year. That’s actually higher than the levels achieved in 2007. Assuming output hits the 1.55 million mark, the deficit (trade in cars) will increase to almost 900,000 units. Car manufacturing is benefitting from the recovery in consumer confidence and household spending but the trade deficit will increase as a result of the strength of domestic demand and limitations to domestic capacity. The UK cannot enjoy a period as the strongest growth economy in the Western world without a significant deterioration in the trade balance. Deficit trade in goods and services … And so it continued to prove with the latest trade data. The deficit trade in goods increased slightly in the month of June to £9.5 billion offset by a £7 billion surplus in services. For the second quarter, the deficit was £27.4 billion (trade in goods) and just under £7 billion overall, goods and services. The service sector surplus was £20.5 billion. For the year as a whole, we expect the goods deficit to be £112.3 billion offset by an £80 billion plus serve sector surplus. No threat to the recovery but we still have concerns about the current account deterioration and the drop in overseas investment income. In the first six months of the year, exports of goods have fallen by almost 8% in value and imports have fallen by 4.6%. World trade growth has been subdued in the first six months of the year yet UK domestic demand increased by 3%. Sterling appreciation against the dollar has lead to a translation impact on the trade balance rather than an elasticity effect. Construction and housing ... The latest adjustment for construction data confirms the recovery continues driven by a huge increase in new housing. Total output increased by 5.3% in June, up by 4.8% in Q2 2014 compared to Q2 last year. The total value of new work in the month increased by 5.8% with the volume of new housing increasing by 18% compared to June last year. House Prices ... The increase in housing supply is doing little to assuage the demand for house moves and house prices. Halifax and Nationwide reported prices up by 10% in July. Our transaction model is simple. Activity is a function of house prices and the real cost of borrowing. With mortgages fixed at 4%, the double digit capital appreciation is irresistible to the basic mechanics of a free market. The real cost of borrowing is negative 6%. Demand for housing will continue to out strip supply, despite the regulatory adjustments to the mortgage market. So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling closed down against the dollar at $1.6774 from $1.682 and unchanged against the Euro at 1.252. The Euro was largely unchanged against the dollar at 1.341. Oil Price Brent Crude closed up slightly at $105.02 from 104.84. The average price in August last year was $111.28. Markets, closed mixed. The Dow closed up 61 points at 16,554 from 16,493 and the FTSE closed down 112 points at 6,567 from 6,679. UK Ten year gilt yields were down at 2.46 from 2.557and US Treasury yields closed at 2.42 from 2.49. Gold was up at $1,305 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. ![]() Of inflation and unemployment? Job centers will be closing in 2017 … This week the ONS released latest data on inflation and unemployment. The rate of employment growth is such, job centers will be closing in 2017, if current trends hold. Unemployment falls … Unemployment fell to 3.1% in June, (claimant count basis) and to 6.5% in the three months to May (LFS basis). The number of unemployed in June was 1.04 million. The rate of job creation has surprised not just our models but those of the Bank of England. Spare capacity will be eliminated within the next three months. Claimant count levels will be back at pre recession levels within six months and job centres will be closing by 2017 - no-one will be looking for work. Is this realistic? Probably not! Earnings remain at unrealistic levels if we accept the official data (sub 1%). The level of recorded earnings does not correlate with job levels. Neither does it sit well with evidence of household spending on car sales, retail sales and trends in the housing market. Our evidence on recruitment and skills shortages also infers that earnings should be on the increase. It is a strange world on Planet ZIRP! As for the so-called Productivity Paradox, do we really believe our businesses are taking on more and more people to do less and less work - of course not. The economy is in danger of overheating based on job trends. Productivity absorption will improve as output increases but this will not really ameliorate the inflation impact! So what of inflation in June? Inflation rises … Inflation CPI basis increased to 1.9% in June from 1.5% in May. Service sector inflation increased to 2.5% and goods inflation also increased to 0.9%. The largest contributions to rising prices came from clothing, food, drinks and transport. We expect inflation to hover above the 2% level for the rest of the year assuming sterling tracks $1.75. Manufacturing prices, increased by just 0.2% in the twelve months to June, slightly down from the prior month. Low world prices and higher sterling dollar values are easing the pressure on input costs. Metals, materials, parts and chemicals are all down in price, import cost basis. Housing Market … So what of the housing market this week? The Council of Mortgage Lenders released the latest gross lending figures for June. “The pace of lending slowed” according to the headlines. Commenting on market conditions in this month’s Market Commentary, CML chief economist Bob Pannell observes: "The macro-prudential interventions announced by the Financial Policy Committee in late June are finely calibrated and precautionary, but could nevertheless reinforce April’s Mortgage Market Review in tipping the UK towards a more conservative lending environment.” Yeah, thanks Bob. Lending was up by 20% in the first quarter, that’s an increase of almost 30% for the first six months of the year. Despite the interventions of the FPC we expect the volume of activity to increase by 25% this year and by a further 15% in 2015. Even then, activity will still be some 20% below pre recession levels. A great recovery but no real threat to the economic outlook over the medium term either. So what of interest rates … The Saturday Economist™ Overheating Index™, ticked higher this week as a result of the inflation and jobs update. Our overall growth outlook is unchanged but the chances of a rate rise before the end of the year ticked higher in line with the index. So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling closed down against the dollar at $1.709 from $1.711 but up against the Euro to 1.263 from (1.258). The Euro moved down against the dollar at 1.352 from 1.360. Oil Price Brent Crude closed up at $108.40 from 106.90 from. The average price in July last year was $102.92. Markets, closed up. The Dow closed above the 17,000 level at 17,100 from 16,900 and the FTSE was up at 6,749 from 6,690. UK Ten year gilt yields were down at 2.60 from 2.61 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.49 from 2.52. Gold was down at $1,310 from $1,336. 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. ![]() I made a trip to Liverpool this week. It was the Battle of the Economists, part of the International Festival of Business programme. Eight top economists were “in the ring” swapping punches. I “refereed” the morning event and hosted the Question Time session. It was a great event in the IFB calendar with lots of interesting perspectives on the world and UK economy. No blood spilled, nor egos bruised the outcome! To close the session, I asked the panel for views on when UK interest rates would begin to rise. Some argued for an immediate rate rise, most expected rates to rise in February next year and a few expected rates to rise in the November this year. As we said last week, “It is true there have been a lot of conflicting signals about when rates will rise! Following Mark Carney’s Mansion House speech, the odds in favour of a rate rise before the end of the year increased but then lengthened slightly, on the low inflation figures for May and the strength of sterling ”. “Don’t watch my lips - watch the data!” the new forward guidance from the Governor. This week, the data continued to suggest the rate rise would be sooner rather than later. House prices up almost 12% … House prices increased by almost 12% in the year to June according to Nationwide. In London prices increased by 26%. The price of a typical property in London, reached the £400,000 level with prices 30% above the 2007 highs. Should we be concerned? Of course but the rate of increase in house prices of itself, will not lead to an increase in interest rates necessarily. Sir Jon Cunliffe, Deputy Governor for Financial Stability at the Bank of England was in Liverpool this week. “The main risk we see arising from the housing market is the risk that house prices continue to grow strongly and faster than earnings. The concern is the increase in prices leads to higher and more concentrated household indebtedness.” The Bank is not worried about the rise in house prices per se. The FPC (Financial Policy Committee) is concerned about the risk to the banking sector from high household indebtedness exposed to the inevitable rate rise and potential collapse in asset prices. The introduction of measures on interest rate multiples and leverage, the confines of policy intervention for the moment. Car Sales up 10.6% year to date … The strength of the housing market demonstrates the strength of consumer confidence and spending. The economy is growing at 3% this year, retail sales were up by almost 4.5% in the first five months of the year, car sales were up by 6% in June and by 11% in the first six months. We are forecasting registrations will be over 2.4 million in 2014, higher than the pre recession levels recorded in 2007, placing additional pressure on the balance of payments in the process. Yet rates remain pegged at 0.5%! Does this continue to make sense? PMI Markit Purchasing Managers’ Index® Survey Data The influential PMI Markit surveys continue to demonstrate strong growth in the economy into June. In manufacturing, strong growth of output, new orders and jobs completed a robust second quarter. In construction, output growth continued at a four-month high and job creation continued at a record pace. In the service sector, the Business Activity Index, recorded 57.7 in June. The survey produced a record increase in employment with reports of higher wages pushing up operating costs. The Manchester Index™- nowcasting the UK economy The Manchester Index™, developed from the GM Chamber of Commerce Quarterly Economic Survey, slowed slightly from 35.1 in the first quarter to 33.6 in the second quarter, still well above pre recession levels. The data within the survey, confirms our projections for growth in the UK economy this year of 3%, moderating slightly to 2.8% in 2015. So when will rates rise ? The Saturday Economist Overheating Index revealed ... At the GM Chamber of Commerce Quarterly Economics Survey yesterday, we revealed the “overheating Index”. This is a summary of fourteen key indicators which form the basis of any decision to increase rates by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC). The strength of consumer spending, reflected in house prices, retail sales and car sales would argue in favour of a rate rise earlier rather than later, as would the growth in the UK economy at 3% above trend rate. On the other hand, inflation, reflected in retail prices and manufacturing prices remain subdued. Despite the strength of the jobs market, earnings remain below trend levels. The decision, on when to increase rates, remains finely balanced for MPC members at this time. Our overheating index is broadly neutral but tipped slightly in favour of a rate rise now. By the final quarter of the year, assuming earnings and inflation rally from current levels, the decision will be much more clear cut. Based on data from the Overheating Index, we expect rates to rise before the end of the year. Clearly markets think so too ... So what happened to sterling this week? Sterling closed up again against the dollar at $1.715 from $1.702 and up against the Euro to 1.261 from (1.247). The Euro moved down against the dollar at 1.360 from 1.365. Oil Price Brent Crude closed down at $110.66 from $111.35. The average price in June last year was $102.92. Markets, US closed up on the strong jobs data. The Dow closed above the 17,000 level at 17,068 from 16,771 and the FTSE was also up at 6,866 from 6,757, the move above 7,000, too much for the moment. UK Ten year gilt yields were up at 2.75 from 2.63 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.64 from 2.63. Gold was up slightly at $1,320 from $1,316. 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. The Manchester Index™ The influential Manchester Index™, is developed from the GM Chamber of Commerce Quarterly Economic Survey. It is a big survey which is comprehensive, authoritative and timely. Now we also have the Manchester Index™. The Manchester Index™ is an early indicator of trends in both the Manchester and the UK economy. Using the Manchester Index we are in a great position to “nowcast” the UK economy and get a pretty good steer on employment and investment in the process. ![]() The Governor was in front of the Treasury Select Committee this week. Pat McFadden raised a laugh about forward Guidance - “The bank is behaving like an unreliable boyfriend, one day hot, one day cold, - people on the other side of the message not really knowing where they stand”. But is that really fair? It is true there have been a lot of conflicting signals about when rates will rise! Following Mark Carney’s Mansion House speech, the odds in favour of a rate rise before the end of the year increased but then lengthened slightly, on the strength of sterling and the low inflation figures for May. The Governor is advising markets, “forward guidance is state contingent”. As the state of the economy changes, the timing of future rate increases will also change. No need to wait for the Quarterly Inflation Report to mark the move. The situation is fluid and dynamic. As the data changes, so will future rate rise probabilities. “Don’t watch my lips - watch the data!” the new guidance. Revisions to GDP data … And so it was, the UK data changed, slightly, this week with the revisions to growth in the first quarter. The ONS revised down growth in Q1 from 3.1% to 3%! This is hardly likely to impact on monetary policy in any way shape or form. The adjustments reflect minor statistical adjustments rather than major structural moves. Our forecast of growth for 3% in 2014 is unaffected by the change. Investment grabbed the headlines, increasing by almost 10% in the quarter. The year on year comparison was against a particularly weak quarter last year. We expect investment growth of over 7% for the year as a whole, using research data derived from the Manchester Index™. [GM Chamber of Commerce research data - capacity and investment intentions]. In the USA, the revisions to GDP growth in the first quarter were much more significant. The headlines confirm growth fell by 2.9% quarter on quarter. Yet, the underlying growth year on year was up by 1.5%. The FOMC expect US growth of 2.2% this year rising to over 3% next. So what of Medium Term Rates … In the UK, the governor would have markets believe rates will rise slowly and thereafter are unlikely to rise above 2.5% in the medium term. In the USA, the Fed present no such illusion. Medium term rates, according to members of the FOMC, are expected to rise to 4% plus and some members expect this to occur by 2016. For now, US Bond traders believe the FOMC is too optimistic about the economy. Interest rates will remain low well into this decade. But if it does happen “over there”, is the UK - US spread manageable? Hardly likely. The medium term path of UK base rates is set to return to the 4.0% plus norm in due course, narrowing the divide. As for the timing - well that is another "guidance" issue altogether! So what happened to sterling ... The pound closed up against the dollar closing above the highly significant $1.70 level. Sterling closed at $1.702 from $1.70, slipping against the Euro to 1.247 (1.252). The Euro moved up against the dollar at 1.365 from 1.358. Oil Price Brent Crude closed down at $111.35 from $114.70 as Middle East concerns cleared slightly. The average price in June last year was $102.92. Markets, closed down. The Dow closed down at 16,771 from 16,945 and the FTSE was also down at 6,757 from 6,825. UK Ten year gilt yields were down at 2.63 from 2.77 and US Treasury yields closed unchanged at 2.63. Gold was steady at $1,316 from $1,314. 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. ![]() The Manchester Index™ confirms the UK recovery is on track with growth continuing around 3% into the second quarter of the year. The index fell slightly to 33.6 from 35.1, still much higher than pre recession levels. The preliminary results from the GM Chamber of Commerce QES data were available this week. The survey suggests strong growth in manufacturing continues, with slightly more moderate growth in the service sector. The results are in line with our forecasts for the full year - available in the June Economic Outlook. The full results and presentation on the influential Chamber of Commerce QES survey for Q2 will be available on the 4th July. Don’t miss that! Public Sector Finances off track … The strong performance in the economy is slightly at odds with the Public Sector Finances for May, released this week. The UK economy is expanding by just over 3% in the first half of the year. We would expect an improvement in borrowing given the strength of the recovery. Two months into the year and borrowing is off track compared to last year and to plan. In the first two months of the year, total borrowing was up at £24.2 billion compared to £23.2 billion prior year. Strong VAT revenues contributed to a 9% growth in total receipts but expenditure increased by almost 6%, despite a fall in interest payments. Last year’s borrowing figure has been revised to £107.0 billion for the financial year. Good news for the Chancellor but revenues will have to improve and expenditure will have to be contained, if this year’s OBR forecast is to be met. Strong Retail sales in May … Strong retail sales are contributing to the VAT receipts. In May retail sales volumes were up 3.9% compared to last year. This is down on April’s staggering 6.5% growth but we still expect growth of 4.6% in the current quarter and 4.3% for the year as a whole. Internet sales were up by 15%, now accounting for 11.4% of all activity. The online disruption continues. Sales values were up by just 3.2%, contributing to deflation and retail concerns in the High Street. Inflation slows in May … And so it was with the inflation figures. Inflation CPI basis slowed to 1.5% in May, down from 1.8% in April. Service sector inflation was 2.2% and goods inflation held at 0.9%. Falls in transport service costs, notably air fares, provided the largest contribution to the decrease in the rate. Other large downward effects came from food, drinks and clothing. The fall came as something of a surprise, we still expect inflation to track near target (2%) for the year as a whole. Producer Prices no pressure on inflation … No pressure on inflation is evident in the producer price information, released this week. Output prices in May increased by just 0.5% as input costs fell by 5%. Import prices of fuel, oil, food, metals, chemicals, parts, equipment and materials the real story. It is a story of weak international growth in GDP and trade, with slow growth in commodity prices, assisted by the strength of sterling, closing the week above the critical $1.70 level. Monetary Policy and Minutes of the MPC ... So why is Sterling so strong? Statements from Governor Carney that rates may rise “sooner than markets expect" are contrasting with the “Business as Usual” stance from the Federal Reserve. The Fed reduced the forecast GDP 2014 outlook for the US economy to just 2.2% from 3% earlier. Tapering is set to continue but guidelines suggest interest rates will not rise until the second quarter of next year. In the UK, we expect rates to rise in the final quarter of the year. Inflation and earnings suggest that strong growth of itself will not precipitate the rise. The Sterling genie is removing the $1.70 stopper. Who speaks for Sterling? We asked in March last year as the pound headed to the $1.50 level. Sterling look set to test $1.74 in the months ahead unless rate fears are calmed. So what happened to sterling this week? The pound closed up against the dollar pushing through resistance at the $1.70 level. Sterling closed up at $1.7010 from $1.696, steady against the Euro at 1.252 (1.253). The Euro strengthened against the dollar at 1.358 from 1.353. Oil Price Brent Crude closed up at $114.70 from $113.07 on Middle East concerns. The average price in June last year was $102.92. The inflation impact cannot be ignored if the a-seasonal pattern persists. Markets, closed up. The Dow closed down at 16,945 from 16,776 and the FTSE was also up at 6,825 from 6,790. UK Ten year gilt yields held at 2.77 and US Treasury yields closed at 2.63 from 2.77 on interest rate trends. Gold moved higher on geo political fears at $1,314 from $1,274. That’s all for this week. Visit the revamped web site. Download our Quarterly Forecast. 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. Disclaimer 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. About the Manchester Index™ … The Greater Manchester economy correlates highly with trends in the national economy. The Manchester Index® is an early indicator of trends in both the Manchester and the UK economy. The index is derived from the GM Quarterly Economics Survey which forms part of the British Chambers of Commerce National Survey. Greater Manchester is the largest contributor to this important business survey. We poll 5000 businesses every quarter. As the principal national business survey and the first to be published in each quarter, the results are closely monitored by HM Treasury and the Bank of England Monetary Committee. The GM survey data has a high correlation with the national data. In other key indicators, the unemployment claimant count for example, has a high correlation (over 99%) with the national data set. Our business investment tracker utilises data from capacity and investment intentions to forecast investment in the UK economy. We lag capacity by four quarters and investment intentions by two quarters to model spending. |
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