Entries from February 1, 2011 - February 28, 2011

February MPC vote could be tight

Posted on Thursday, February 3, 2011 at 04:16PM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

The February MPC vote is on a knife-edge, according to an "MPC-ometer" model designed to predict policy decisions based on incoming economic and financial information. The model suggests a 4-4-1 split (i.e. four votes to hike offset by Adam Posen's call for more QE), leaving the hawks just short of majority.

The MPC-ometer foresaw support for long-standing hawk Andrew Sentance at the January meeting – see previous post. Spencer Dale and Paul Tucker are plausible additions to the Sentance-Weale axis this month.

Most economists assume that a rate hike is still distant following news of a 0.5% fall in GDP in the fourth quarter and a defiantly-dovish speech by Bank of England Governor Mervyn King. The median forecast is for a quarter-point rise in the fourth quarter of 2011, according to the monthly Reuters poll.

The MPC is likely to discount the snow-affected headline GDP result but place weight on the ONS assessment of a "flattish" underlying performance – still notably weaker than expected. The MPC-ometer, however, judges that this negative surprise will be more than offset by a further surge in consumer and business price expectations in January as well as solid survey activity indicators and strong financial markets.

Analysts may have been bamboozled by Mr King's speech, which is not necessarily reflective of the balance of opinion on the Committee.

If the model forecast is correct, the hawkish camp will be well-positioned for a rematch in March, possibly armed with further data suggesting a strong GDP bounce-back in the first quarter.

UK money figures no obstacle to interest rate hike

Posted on Tuesday, February 1, 2011 at 12:30PM by Registered CommenterSimon Ward | CommentsPost a Comment

UK money supply figures for December are a mixed bag, suggesting moderate economic expansion during the first half of 2011.

Encouragingly, corporate liquidity has improved further, with non-financial corporations' sterling and foreign currency deposits rising at a 4.3% annualised rate in the three months to December. Echoing business surveys, strength was focused on the manufacturing sector, with a stunning 22.1% rise, while deposits of companies in the services sector slipped by 1.4%.

With companies continuing to repay debt, the liquidity ratio (i.e. bank deposits divided by bank borrowing) reached its highest level since the second quarter of 2007. Excluding the overleveraged commercial property sector, the ratio is at a new high in data extending back to 1998 – see chart. The liquidity ratio leads business investment, which rose by 8.9% in the year to the third quarter.

Broad money rose by 3.0% annualised in the three months to December while annual growth moved up to 2.3%. As previously argued, a 2-3% rate of increase may be more than sufficient to support trend economic expansion and 2% inflation because the velocity of circulation is rising in response to negative real interest rates. Some MPC members seem to be placing less weight on low broad money expansion as a factor restraining inflation, with the January minutes stating that "money and credit growth could remain weaker than nominal spending growth for some while".

There are two concerns. First, narrow money remains sluggish – M1, on the ECB's definition (i.e. currency plus overnight deposits), rose by only 1.3% in the 12 months to December, unchanged from November but down from 5.0% in December 2009. A further fall would be alarming. Secondly, high inflation is acting as a drag on economic prospects by weakening real-terms monetary trends. This, however, argues for the MPC to press ahead with policy tightening to prevent the current inflation overshoot from becoming entrenched.