Fears over the economy will continue in the short-term with GDP set to contract sharply. The Bank of England will need to maintain very low interest rates while the potential for quantitative easing will also be very unsettling. The banking sector will also be an important focus and fears that the latest measures will not be sufficient to stabilise the sector will undermine confidence. There will also be fears over rising public debt and the risk of a credit-rating downgrade. Sterling should still gain some protection from the very weak fundamentals elsewhere.
Sterling came under heavy selling pressure for much of the week as confidence evaporated. The UK currency weakened to a 23-year low below 1.36 against the dollar while it also weakened against the Euro as rallies were sold into.
The banking sector remained a very important focus as the government announcing fresh support measures. As well as an increased equity stakes, there were plans to set up an insurance scheme for loans. There was also a new GBP50bn programme for the Bank of England to buy securities, effectively a move towards quantitative easing.
There were rumours of a sovereign credit rating downgrade which also undermined confidence, especially as a downgrade would have serious negative medium-term implications for the economy and currency. Jobless claims rose by a further 77,900 in December after a revised 83,100 increase previously. The latest government budget data was also weaker than expected with a net borrowing requirement of GBP14.9bn. The CBI industrial survey remained depressed with the orders component weakening further to -48 in January from -35 and overall conditions were at the worst level for 26 years.
GDP recorded a 1.5% decline for the fourth quarter, officially confirming a recession, and this was the weakest figure for at least 28 years. Retail sales rose 1.6% in December as price cutting boosted volumes. The headline UK consumer inflation rate fell to 3.1% in December from 4.1% the previous month which was higher than expected. Core inflation fell more sharply to 1.1% from 2.0% the previous month.
According to the latest minutes, the Bank of England voted 8-1 for a 0.50% rate cut to 1.50% in January. Blanchflower wanted a 1.00% cut, but the majority of members were wary of cutting rates at all which triggered some doubts whether the bank would cut aggressively again in February.
There were reports that Sterling weakness would be discussed at the February G7 meting and this triggered a sharp short-covering rally as high volatility continued.
Swiss franc:
There will be further fears over the Swiss economy in the short-term, especially with the export sector under serious pressure. The National Bank will also maintain a very low interest rate policy in the short-term and there is likely to be opposition to currency gains. The degrees of financial-sector stresses will remain very important in the short-term. The franc will gain some defensive support from elevated levels of risk aversion, but there will also be fears over the Swiss banking sector which will limit franc support.
The Swiss currency edged weak against the dollar over the week with lows beyond 1.16. The franc also weakened to test support levels near 1.51 against the Euro, although it gained some fresh support on Friday as risk tolerances declined.
National Bank member Hildebrand stated that the bank could sell an unlimited amount of francs to stop appreciation of the currency. He also stated that the bank must not increase money supply indefinitely, but the comments reinforced market speculation over a more aggressive policy to stem franc appreciation.
Headline Swiss retail sales fell 1.4% in the year to November, but there was a small increase when adjusted for the number of shopping days. The ZEW business confidence index staged a small recovery for December while still historically wea |