Since the emergence of the debt crisis in Greece, UK policymakers
have been once again patting themselves on the back for not joining the
Euro. Otherwise, they would currently be in the same awkward position as
France and Germany, whose economic might underpins the entire Eurozone
and are wondering about if and how they should lend their support to
Greece. Given that the Pound has fallen at an even faster clip than the
Euro in recent weeks, however, it seems investors don’t share their
sense of complacency. What gives?
One might be inclined to posit that the Pound is falling for reasons
unrelated to Greece and the travails of the EU. After all, most of the
economic data emanating from the UK these days isn’t exactly positive.
GDP grew by an abysmal .4% in the fourth quarter of 2009, and the Bank
of England, itself, has revised is 2010 projections down to 1.5%. In
addition, inflation is creeping up and short-term rates remain low, such
that real interest rates (and by extension, the carry associated with
holding Pounds) in the UK are effectively negative.
While this alone would be grounds for selling the Pound, a cursory
glance at GBP/USD and EUR/USD cross rates reveals that the Pound and
Euro are falling in tandem. In my eyes, this implies that investors have
impugned a connection between the situation in the EU (i.e. Greece and
the other “PIGS” economies) and in the UK. And no wonder, since UK debt
levels are as worrisome as any other country, developing or
industrialized. Its budget deficit is 13%, slightly higher than in
Greece. Private debt is estimated at £1.5 Trillion, or £60,000 per
household, which is the highest (in relative terms) in the world. “Then
there’s the trillion-pound bank bail-out, the trillion-pound
public-sector pension liability, the trillion-pound public debt and
those off-balance-sheet private finance initiatives schemes. If you add
up Britain’s real liabilities you find that the UK is heading for a total debt burden of several times its GDP,” summarized one analyst.
Of course, this is nothing new. I, myself, have written about
the looming UK debt crisis on previous occasions. While such a crisis
is still years away, the turmoil in Greece is causing investors to cast
fresh eyes on the similarities and differences with the UK, and they
clearly don’t like what they see. On the one hand, Britain’s monetary
independence means that it can deflate its debt (by simply printing more
money), unlike Greece, whose membership in the European Monetary Union
precludes such a possibility. While this means that Britain is
ultimately less likely to default on its debt, it makes it more likely
that it its currency will have to weaken at some point in the future, so
that its liabilities remain manageable. Bond investors, then, are right
to prefer UK Bonds, but currency investors are equally right to shun
the Pound in favor of the Euro.
It seems that Britain’s conception of itself is somewhat flawed.
While it thinks of itself as akin to France or Germany (and hence, is
quite happy not to be an EU member at the moment), the markets seem to
think of it as a Spain or Portugal. The implication is that the markets
currently believe that the UK would do better if it was a member of the
EU than on its own. Of course, that proposition is debatable (and still
unlikely), but it’s worth bearing in mind because it’s what investors
apparently believe.
As usual, the BOE remains (perhaps willfully) oblivious of all of
this. It is mulling an extension of its quantitative easing program,
which is supposed to end this month. This program is responsible for an
expansion of the money supply equal to 14% of GDP in 2009 alone! Most
economists consider it a dismal failure, and it seems to have succeeded only in catalyzing growth in prices (aka inflation) rather than output (aka GDP). “The suspicion
is that the UK government and Bank of England is not worried that the
pound remains weak in this repositioning of currencies. They may indeed
welcome it. There is no immediate appetite for raising interest rates to
strengthen sterling and no point making exports harder by strengthening
the exchange rate.” They would be wise to bear in mind, though, that
while currency depreciation is useful for devaluing existing debt, it
can have the unintended consequence of scaring off investors, and make
it difficult to fund future debt.
Currency investors may be ahead of them on this one.
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