The British Pound’s rise since the beginning of March has been nothing short of spectacular: “Improving economic data have helped the pound
advance 14 percent against the dollar this year and 12 percent against
the euro.” Due primarily to a recovery in risk appetite and the
concomitant belief that the Pound had been oversold following the onset
of the credit crisis, investors began pouring hot money back into the
UK. As recently as two weeks ago, one analyst intoned that, “Longer
term, we are in part of an uptrend for the pound. I don’t think this is
over.”
Since then, however, a series of negative developments have cast
doubt on such optimism. The first was the release of economic data,
which indicated an unexpected widening in Britain’s trade deficit. While
exports rose, imports rose even faster, causing analysts to wonder
whether it would be realistic to expect the British economic recovery
would be led by exports: “We remain skeptical
that the U.K. is about to become an export-driven economy any time
soon. A return to sustained growth continues to look unlikely in the
near term,” said one economist.
The second development was the decision by the Bank of England to expand its quantitative easing program:
“The central bank spent 125 billion pounds since March as part of the
asset-purchase program and had permission to use as much as 150 billion
pounds, about 10 percent of Britain’s gross domestic product. Chancellor
of the Exchequer Alistair Darling has now authorized an extra 25
billion pounds.” This came as a huge shock to investors, which had
collectively assumed that the program had already been concluded.
Upon closer analysis, it appears that the rise of the Pound and the
expanding trade deficit might have contributed to the BOE’s decision:
“According to the Bank’s rule of thumb,
this [the Pound's rise] is equivalent to interest rate increases of 1.5
percentage points.” However, interest rates are already close to zero.
The BOE has already conveyed its intention to maintain an easy monetary
policy for the near-term (March 2010 interest rate futures reflect an
expectation for a 75 basis point rate hike); otherwise, there is nothing
else it could do on the interest rate front. “Unless the UK is ready to
deflate its production costs heavily, it can only achieve required
competitiveness by reducing the value of sterling…The BoE knows this and
its decision to increase its quantitative easing efforts may well have
to be seen in the context of summer sterling strength.”
The final factor has been the Dollar’s sudden reversal.
Previously, the Pound had been helped as much by UK optimism as by
Dollar pessimism. This changed last week, when positive US economic data
triggered expectations of a near-term economic recovery and consequent
Fed rate hikes. In short, the Pound must now rest on its own two feet,
and can no longer count on Dollar pessimism for a boost: “The current
gloomy sentiment, which has chipped some 3% off sterling’s value against
the dollar in the past four trading days, represents a sharp turnaround.”
The prognosis for UK economic recovery should receive some clarity
tomorrow, when the Bank of England releases a report on inflation and
GDP. At this point, we will have a better idea as to what to expect from
the Pound going forward.
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