Entries from April 1, 2010 - April 30, 2010

Will the UK shift to a "core" inflation target?

Posted on Thursday, April 22, 2010 at 11:26AM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

Previous posts have suggested that the Bank of England has adopted a looser interpretation of its remit in order to justify maintaining its current policy stance despite a significant inflation overshoot ("inflation targeting lite"). This is based partly on statistical analysis of the Bank's historical "reaction function" – the "MPC-ometer" model indicates that several Committee members should already have voted to tighten, if the "old" rules still applied. (The model, however, has yet to forecast a majority vote for restriction.)

The suggested shift is also consistent with a speech by the Bank's Governor Mervyn King in January, in which he appeared to downplay the "official" inflation measure in favour of a loosely-defined core concept excluding "temporary price level factors". Core inflation, he argued, would be determined by the "output gap" and broad money growth, both of which were giving a reassuring message. (The view here is that slow M4 expansion is not disinflationary because negative real interest rates have cut the demand to hold money.)

This raises the possibility that the Bank will seek to formalise its policy shift by requesting that the new government change its remit to specify a core inflation measure as the operational target, similar to the Canadian approach. The obvious candidate measure would be the consumer price index excluding energy, food, alcohol and tobacco – this omits most of the impact of commodity price and excise duty changes (not air passenger duty) and could be further adjusted for future VAT shifts. (It does not, however, fully exclude the effect of exchange rate fluctuations, which – bizarrely – Governor King suggested should also be discounted in policy-setting.)

Against a background of likely continuing upward pressure on commodity prices and indirect taxes due to strong trend emerging-world growth and necessary fiscal retrenchment respectively, such a change would represent a de facto raising of the inflation target. Over the last five years, core consumer prices on the above definition have risen by 0.9% per annum less than the headline CPI.

A remit change is hardly likely to be resisted by politicians keen to preserve low interest rates in order to ease the perceived pain of fiscal tightening and minimise debt service costs. The possibility of such a development may partly explain the sharp rise in market inflation expectations discussed in prior posts – see the chart in Tuesday's inflation comment – and belatedly acknowledged in the April MPC minutes.

US supply bottlenecks indicator in Fed tightening zone

Posted on Tuesday, April 20, 2010 at 03:42PM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

The recent "stealth tightening" by the Federal Reserve – removing reserves from the banking system in order to push the Fed funds rate towards the top of the 0-0.25% target band – is probably a response to stronger-than-expected economic news and associated evidence of rising capacity strains.

A measure of supply bottlenecks that has correlated with Fed policy shifts historically is the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) manufacturing "vendor deliveries index", based on the net percentage of firms reporting lengthening delivery times (a reading of 50 indicates balanced responses). This surged to 65 in March – the highest since June 2004.

The index has reached the current level on 12 prior occasions since 1950 (instances separated by less than year are counted as a single occurrence). Every case was associated with a significant rise in official interest rates – see chart. In the last cycle, the index rose above 65 in March 2004; the Fed embarked on a long series of rate hikes in June.

BoE credibility erodes as inflation "surprises" again

Posted on Tuesday, April 20, 2010 at 12:11PM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

The Bank of England's fantasy forecast of a decline in annual CPI inflation to about 1% in early 2011 looks even less credible in the wake of March numbers showing an unexpectedly large rise from 3.0% to 3.4%. The increase partly reflected strength in energy and food prices but "core" inflation also firmed – the CPI excluding energy, food, alcohol and tobacco rose an annual 3.0%, up from 2.9% in February.

The significant overshoot of the 2% target cannot be attributed simply to January's VAT hike. Assuming 50% pass-through of tax changes, CPI inflation would stand at about 2.5% if VAT and duty rates had been held constant over the last year. (This estimate is derived by averaging the annual increases in the headline CPI and the CPI at constant tax rates, which is calculated assuming 100% pass-through.)

The headline rate may rise again in April, possibly exceeding January's 3.5% high. Budget-announced duty increases are officially estimated to add 0.18% to the CPI versus 0.08% in April 2009, while the monthly rise in core prices was unusually low in April last year, implying an unfavourable base effect. The Bank will be forced yet again to raise its near-term forecast in the May Inflation Report – the February Report projected a second-quarter average of 2.8-2.9%.

Continued core inflation stickiness reflects residual exchange rate effects and a revival in pricing power as the recovery has gained momentum. Consistent with business surveys – see last month's inflation comment – services inflation firmed from an annual 3.0% to 3.3% in March. Core goods inflation has slowed slightly, reflecting recent sterling stability, but will be underpinned by pass-through of surging input costs – already evident in producer output price numbers.

The persistent overshoot coupled with the Bank's relaxed response have contributed to a significant rise in market inflation expectations, as implied by the yield gap between conventional and index-linked gilts. The Bank's own estimate of 10-year-ahead implied inflation has risen by half a percentage point since the dovish February Inflation Report to its highest level since August 2008 – see chart. Early policy tightening is likely to be required to stabilise market expectations and reestablish inflation-fighting credibility.

Lib Dem surge vulnerable to greater tax plan scrutiny

Posted on Monday, April 19, 2010 at 01:19PM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

The recent surge in the Liberal Democrats' popularity appears to have pre-dated last Thursday's leaders' debate. An ICM poll conducted on Wednesday and Thursday (i.e. presumably mostly before the debate) showed support up to 27% from 20% in the previous survey over 9-11 April.

This pick-up probably reflects a favourable response to Wednesday's manifesto launch and in particular the pledge to raise the personal income tax allowance to £10,000. Tax policies are having a significant influence on voting intentions – the Conservatives had benefited from their opposition to Labour's planned national insurance rise but their lower-tax mantle has been stolen by the Lib Dems.

A Tory fight-back strategy, therefore, must aim to undermine the Lib Dems' claim that most voters will benefit from their tax plans, with the £16.8 billion estimated cost of the higher personal allowance "paid for in full by closing loopholes that unfairly benefit the wealthy and polluters". The largest offset (£5.5 billion) is from extending Labour's restriction of pension tax relief to all higher-rate earners, not just those with gross income including pension contributions of more than £150,000. The swingeing rise in air transport taxes (£3.3 billion) will also be widely felt, as will the new levy on bank profits (£2.2 billion), which will be passed on in borrowing / saving rates. Small business owners and buy-to-let investors, meanwhile, will be hit by the equalisation of capital gains and income tax rates.

Earlier posts suggested that less optimistic voter perceptions of the economy would undermine Labour support as the election approached. There is evidence of this effect – both the EU Commission and Nationwide consumer confidence indicators fell in March – but the polls have been dominated by the swing to the Lib Dems. This, however, looks vulnerable to greater scrutiny of the party's tax plans, as well as a less impressive performance by Mr. Clegg in the remaining debates.

Equities at risk from Fed stealth tightening

Posted on Friday, April 16, 2010 at 11:23AM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke this week delivered a more upbeat assessment of US economic prospects while – in response to questioning – repeating the mantra that very low official rates will be needed for an "extended" period. Markets, however, may be wrong to assume that this implies no policy tightening until late 2010 at the earliest.

The Fed's management of its balance sheet, indeed, suggests that a policy reversal has already started. The monetary base – currency plus banks' reserve balances at the Fed – has fallen by 6.0% over the last seven weeks. This reflects the impact of the "supplementary financing programme" (SFP) under which the Treasury issues additional bills and deposits the proceeds in its account at the Fed, resulting in a reduction in bank reserves.

Monetary base movements have recently led equity market fluctuations – see Andy Kessler's Wall Street Journal article and the first chart below.

The SFP is now up to $175 billion of a targeted $200 billion, suggesting that its negative impact on the monetary base will abate. The Fed, however, could request a further expansion of the programme or use other methods to continue to drain reserves, such as reverse repurchase agreements or auctions of term deposits.

In an earlier speech on the Fed's exit strategy, Chairman Bernanke suggested that the first stage of a tightening process would be a liquidity-draining operation designed to align market interest rates with the officially-set rate paid on reserve balances, currently 0.25%. The second stage would be a hike in the reserves rate. Consistent with this plan, the effective Fed funds rate has risen from a range of 0.10-0.14% in January and February to 0.20% as the monetary base has contracted – second chart.

The cautionary message for equities and other risk assets from the Fed's apparent policy shift is reinforced by a recent cross-over of G7 annual industrial output growth above real narrow money expansion – third chart. As previously discussed, global equities have underperformed cash by 5% per annum on average since 1970 when production has outpaced real M1, outperforming by 11% pa at other times.

 

 

Gilt market inflation expectations still climbing

Posted on Thursday, April 15, 2010 at 12:30PM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

A previous post argued that a January speech by Bank of England Governor Mervyn King signalled a change in the Monetary Policy Committee's interpretation of its remit. Instead of targeting a 2% annual rise in consumer prices "at all times", policy-makers would focus on the Bank's forecast for an unspecified "core" inflation measure, excluding "temporary price level factors". The post suggested that this amounted to a de facto raising of the target from 2% to perhaps 3%.

Markets, it appears, agree that the Bank's inflation-fighting commitment has softened. The yield gap between conventional and index-linked gilts of between five and 15 years' maturity – a proxy for long-term market inflation expectations – has risen by 50 basis points (bp) since the February Inflation Report, which confirmed the dovish message of the Governor's speech. US market-implied inflation expectations are little changed over the same period  – see first chart.

The UK yield spread is now 50 bp above the average over the last 10 years and at its highest since September 2008. It is above the levels reached before sustained increases in official interest rates starting in 2003 and 2006 – see second chart. With growth accelerating, asset prices buoyant and sterling raw material costs soaring, the Bank should already have started to withdraw emergency stimulus. Markets may yet force an earlier and larger rise in rates than most expect.