Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Can GBP Beat The Double Dip To Stay Positive?

By world market pulse team on October 13,2010

Sterling traders have been worried over the news about falling house prices in the UK with the release of the RICS House price survey for September which indicated that the number of surveyors reporting falling home prices increased relative to those reporting increases. The release not only corroborated the view that the UK housing market continued cooling recently and weighed on sterling sentiment but is also one of main reasons why ‘double-dip’ is starting to reappear in market discussions after the pound lost a little ground yesterday.


Inflation Report Supporting GBP: Despite data pointing to weakening demand and a cooling housing market, the CPI data release out of the UK corroborates the view that QE2 is still only a distant prospect. The CPI release indicates that inflation remains well above inflation targets with headline CPI at 3.1%, core CPI at 2.7% and RPI at 4.6% (all year over year figures). The CPI figures were almost exactly in line with expectations although the RPI came in slightly higher than the expected 4.4%. Positive inflation surprises last month triggered a temporary correction higher in market inflation expectations as proxied by the implied rate of the UK 5y Inflation swap.

Analysts at World Market Pulse expect that the inflation support is likely to continue adding to the GBP strength in the short term despite the release of the RICS House price survey; while analysts at the Deutsche Bank believe the door to further near-term gains to 1.6090/110 remains open as long as support at 1.5800 is unbroken. Indeed, an early dip to 1.5860 would create the necessary risk-reward conditions for a new bullish
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Britain Economic Overview: The Bank of England has reported a decline in services output in both June and July. Consumer confidence deteriorated more than expected last month. Industrial output is off 11% from pre-recession levels and has been flat since February. Retail sales seem to be holding up pretty well but consumer credit was up a meager 0.2% y/y. Business lending has fallen for five consecutive months. The government feels the Bank of England can come to the rescue if the economy does show serious signs of faltering as cuts and tax hikes hit home. Maybe yes maybe no; the BoE interest rates remain at record lows but QE remains an option. However, with the planned deficit reduction it seems unlikely that economic growth can do anything other than head south over 2011.

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