While the Federal Reserve meeting is the highlight this week, the UK has a
number economic reports and the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee
meets. The UK reports inflation tomorrow, followed employment,
and then retail sales a few hours before the central bank decision.
UK price pressures are rising. The past decline in sterling the
rise in commodity prices are evident. Headline CPI is expected to rise
0.2% in November. In November 2015, prices were flat. This means that the due to the base effect, the
year-over-year rate is expected to rise to 1.1% from 0.9%. If that
pans out, UK headline CPI will be at its highest level since late October
2014. Recall that in September-October 2015;
the readings were still negative. The base effect will likely be
evident in the December report (December 2015 CPI rose 0.1%), and especially in
January (January 2016 CPI fell 0.8%).
The core rate pulled back to 1.2% in October from 1.5% in September.
It is expected to tick up to 1.3% in November, which is what it has averaged
this year. However, to the extent that producer prices
reflect pipeline pressures, UK consumer inflation is likely to rise further in
the coming months. Input prices which reflect the increase in raw
material prices and fuel, as well as the depreciation of sterling.
October input prices were 12.2% above a year
ago levels, and they are expected to have accelerated to a 13.5% pace.
Output prices, which are manufactured
goods prices have been slower to rise. The base effect will turn a 0.2%
increase in November into a 2.5% year-over-year increase, up from 2.1% in
October.
The UK labor market growth is not as robust as it has been.
Since 2012, the monthly claimant count has mostly fallen. However, February seemed to mark the turning point. Since then, only one month
(July) saw a decline in the monthly claimant count. It has risen in the
August through October period and is expected to rise again when the data is reported in the middle of the week.
However, deterioration has yet to be seen
in the unemployment rate, which made a new cyclical low in of 4.8% in the three-month period through September and is
expected to remain there in
October.
Earnings growth, which is also reported with an extra month lag, are
expected to have ticked up in the three months
year-over-year through October, excluding bonuses are expected to have risen
2.6% from a 2.4% pace. In May through August 2015, weekly earnings
rose a 2.8% clip but may have been a bit
of a statistical fluke, as it finished the end of the year at 2.0% pace.
Including bonuses, the average weekly earnings are expected to be stable for
the third month at 2.3%.
Retail sales jumped an outsized 1.9% in October, and will lucky to simply
be flat in November. Cooler weather in October spurred early winter clothing purchases, and past decline
in sterling may have enticed tourists (foreign consumers), including Chinese
shopper during their national holiday in early October. The 7.4%
year-over-year pace reported from October was the strongest since 2002.
Flat sales on the month will push the
year-over-year rate to a still respectable 5.9% pace.
The Bank of England meeting concludes the day after the Fed's
meeting. While the Fed is widely expected to hike rates, the BOE will
leave rates on hold. There is a 16 bp spread between the implied yield of
the Dec 2016 short-sterling futures contract and the Dec 2017 contract
(53 bp and 38 bp respectively). This is
consistent with no change in policy next year.
The US premium over the UK on two-year money is at its widest since at
least 1992 today at 1.02%. As recently as the end of October the
premium was 57 bp. Over the past three months, the US two-year yield has
risen 37 bp, while the UK yield is off five
bp. The 10-year differential has widened from 55 bp on November 1 to over
100 bp now. In August the spread briefly traded through 105 bp, which was
the most extreme since almost 123 bp in 2000.
Sterling saw $1.50 just before the referendum results were announced in late June. It
recorded a low near $1.1840 on the so-called flash crash on October 7.
Since then it has gradually climbed higher. The best level since October
7 was recorded on December 6 at $1.2775.
Today's low near $1.2545 is the low
for December (thus far). There appears to be scope for additional
near-term gains. While the $1.2775 is the next target, there may be scope
before the end of they year toward $1.2830. Even though the Fed will most likely hike rates, we are concerned
that many will be disappointed if it does not upgrade its forecasts. We
do not think this is particularly realistic, given the official comments and
the lack of concrete details from the new Administration.
Disclaimer
Busy Week for the UK
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
December 12, 2016
Rating: