Yesterday, UK Chancellor George Osborne announced
that his government was ready to begin rebuilding its foreign exchange
reserves. Depending on when, how, (or even if) this program is
implemented, it could have serious implications for the Pound.
Forex reserve watchers (myself included) were excited by the updated US Treasury report
on foreign holdings of US Treasury securities. As the Dollar is the
world’s de-facto reserve currency and the US Treasury securities are
the asset of choice, the report is basically a rough sketch of both the
Dollar’s global popularity and the interventions of foreign Central
Banks. Personally, I thought the biggest shocker was not that China’s
Treasury holdings are $300 Billion greater than previously believed
(with $3 Trillion in reserves, that’s really just a rounding error),
but rather that the UK’s holdings declined by 50% in 2010, to a mere
$260 Billion.
Given that the Bank of England (BoE) injected more than $500 Billion
into the UK money supply in 2010, I suppose that shouldn’t have been
much of a revelation. After all, selling US Treasury Securities and
using the proceeds to buy British Gilts (sovereign debt) and other
financial instruments would enable the BoE to achieve its objective
without having to resort to wholesale money printing. In addition, if
not for this sleight of hand, UK inflation would probably be even
higher.
Still, this is little more than a mere accounting trick, and those
funds will probably still need to be withdrawn from the money supply at
some point anyway. Whether the BoE burns the proceeds or reinvests
them back into foreign instruments is certainly worth pondering, but
insofar as it won’t impact inflation, it is a matter of economic
policy, and not monetary policy.
As Chancellor Osborn indicated, the UK will probably send these
funds back abroad. In addition to providing support for the Dollar (as
well as another reason not to be nervous about the upcoming end of the
Fed’s QE2), this would seriously weaken the Pound, at a time that it
is already near a 30-year low on a trade-weighted basis. After falling
off a cliff in 2009, the Pound recovered against the Dollar in 2010,
largely due to the BoE’s shuffling of its foreign exchange reserves. To
undo this would certainly risk sending the Pound back towards these
depths.
On the one hand, the UK is certainly conscious of this and would act
accordingly, perhaps even delaying any foreign exchange reserve
accumulation until the Pound strengthens. On the other hand, the BoE is
under pressure to fight inflation. It is reluctant to raise interest
rates because of the impact it would have on the fragile economic
recovery. The same can be said for unwinding its asset purchases.
However, if it offset this with purchases of US Treasury securities and
other foreign currency assets, it could weaken the Pound and maintain
some form of economic stimulus. Especially since the UK has run a
sizable trade/current account deficit for as long as anyone can
remember, the BoE has both the flexibility/justification it needs to
coax the exchange rate down a little bit.
Ultimately, we’ll need more information before we can determine how
this will impact the Pound. Still, this is an indication that the
GBP/USD might not have much more room to appreciate.
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