BoE governor predicts UK interest rates will fall gradually
Newsflash: The governor of the Bank of England has predicted that interest rates will fall “gradually”.
In an interview with KentOnline, just published, Andrew Bailey said that “inflation has come down a long way” – it was 2.2% in August, just above the BoE’s target, having fallen from over 11% in autumn 2022.
Last week, the Bank left interest rates on hold at 5% – but Bailey says he is “very encouraged” that inflation will fall, leading to lower borrowing costs.
He says:
“We still have to get it sustainably at the target and we have quite an unbalanced mix of components of inflation at the moment. But I’m very encouraged that the path is downwards therefore I do think the path for interest rates will be downwards, gradually.”
Bailey also cautions that interest rates are unlikely to fall back to the record low (just 0.1%) we saw in the Covid-19 pandemic, before the inflation shock of the Ukraine war.
He told KentOnline:
“Where it will settle is a good question. Simple answer is I can’t tell you with any great accuracy. What I would say is ‘will we go back to the very low near zero interest rates that we had until not that long ago’?
“My answer is I would not expect that because what caused interest rates to go that way it was, amongst other things, two very big shocks to the economy.
The financial markets predict UK interest rates could fall to 4.5% by the end of this year, and to 3.5% or lower by the end of 2025.
Key events
The financial markets are pretty confident that the next cut in UK interest rates will come at the Bank of England’s next meeting, in November.
A quarter-point cut in UK interest rates, to 4.75%, is now seen as an 83% chance according to the money market pricing this morning.
That leaves a 17% chance that the BoE leaves rate on hold again, as it did last week, after cutting rates in August from 5.25% to 5%.
Raspberry Pi shares jump after first results since IPO
UK micro computer maker Raspberry Pi has released its first financial results since it floated on the stock market in June – and it has not disappointed.
Raspberry Pi, which makes affordable, easily programmable minicomputers, has told the City that its first half profitability was stronger than expected. Gross profits jumped by 47% to $34.2m, compared with $23.2m in the first half of 2023.
Revenues swelled by 61% to $144.0m.
But pre-tax profits were little changed, at £10.8m.
Raspberry Pi says its expectations for the full year remain unchanged, even though gross profitability in the first half was ahead of internal expectations.
Eben Upton, CEO of Raspberry Pi says:
“The IPO was the watershed moment of the first half, with Admission to trading just two weeks before the period end. In continued pleasing trading in the first half, we saw strong uptake of our latest flagship SBC, Raspberry Pi5, the launch of the Raspberry Pi AI Kit, and the successful ramp to production of RP2350, our second-generation microcontroller platform.
The higher than usual customer and channel inventory levels which were evident at the time of the IPO have continued to unwind, and there is a growing sense that this will have concluded by the year end.
Analysts and investors are impressed too – Raspberry Pi’s shares have jumped by over 5% this morning, to the top of the FTSE 100 leaderboard.
Neil Shah, Director of Content & Strategy at Edison Group, says:
“Raspberry Pi’s first set of results since its IPO on the LSEx in June have not disappointed. The company has soundly beaten expectations, with profits rising by 47% from $23.2m to $34.2m. Having mostly focused on producing Single Board Computers (SBCs) for educational purposes, these devices are now set to become much more commercially significant, with applications to AI, machine learning, and the Internet of Things.
Much of this increase in profits is down to supply chain recovery, which had previously buffeted tech companies like Raspberry Pi. It remains to be seen whether the company will join the ranks of the marquee tech stocks like NVIDIA; but with so many new applications for its core product, the potential for growth is vast.”
Raspberry Pi is now worth £700m, a long way from Nvidia which has a market capitalisation of $2.85 trillion…..
Bailey: We accept criticism
Andrew Bailey also sounded sanguine about the criticism raining down on the Bank of England from right-wingers such as Liz Truss.
In April, the UK’s shortest-serving PM revealed that she considered sacking Bailey as part of a drive to dismantle an “economic establishment” that she says helped to bring her down.
Then in August, Truss demanded an investigation into the Bank of England after analysis showed the majority of the bond market crash following her mini-budget was caused by dangerous practices in the pensions industry.
Bailey (whose bank intervened to stop the panic in the bond market), shrugs off the criticism, telling Kent Online:
“I’ve never actually met Liz Truss, so I don’t know her personally.
But I think it’s part of being in public life that you have to accept there will be plenty of comments. My view is that it’s not a moment to get angry or exasperated, we know what our job is.”
The bond market crash after the mini-budget was driven by pension funds selling UK government debt (called gilts), because they faced losses on a strategy called liability-driven investment (LDI). LDI allowed pension funds to hedge against future risk, but the strategy unwound as gilt prices fell, forcing pension funds to sell gilts to meet margin calls – making the situation worse.
You can argue (as Truss does) that regulators should have been more alert to the danges of leveraged LDI strategies. But the spark that lit the fire was the unfunded tax cuts and spending commitments in the mini-budget, which hit government bond prices.
BoE governor: Brexit having ‘short-term painful effect on trade’
Andrew Bailey has also been quizzed about fears in Kent that Brexit border checks will cause disruption in and around Dover.
Bailey tried to swerve committing news about Brexit, but did point out that some small businesses will suffer from disruption.
He told KentOnline:
“I’m a public official, so I don’t take a position on Brexit per se. I have to say if you ask me about the economics of Brexit what I say is what you would expect, and what we have seen, there will be some short-term painful effect on trade.
“But over a longer period of time the compensation for that is that trade will be redirected. But it can be particular impactful on small businesses and for some of them that’s just not viable.”
We’ve seen this month that the UK government is still struggling to cope with the implications of leaving the European Union.
Planned post-Brexit checks on fruit and vegetables brought into Britain from the EU have been delayed for the third time, while a plan to force food manufacturers to put “not for EU” labels on all meat and dairy products sold across Britain next month have been indefinitely postponed.
But, the EU is due to launch a new “entry-exit system” (EES) that will record the movements of non-EU visitors to the Schengen Area, from November 2024.
This will mean an end to passports being stamped; instead, anyone travelling to a country in the Schengen area using a UK passport must register their biometric details, such as fingerprints or a photo, when they arrive.
The exact date that EES will be introduced has not been confirmed, though.
BoE governor predicts UK interest rates will fall gradually
Newsflash: The governor of the Bank of England has predicted that interest rates will fall “gradually”.
In an interview with KentOnline, just published, Andrew Bailey said that “inflation has come down a long way” – it was 2.2% in August, just above the BoE’s target, having fallen from over 11% in autumn 2022.
Last week, the Bank left interest rates on hold at 5% – but Bailey says he is “very encouraged” that inflation will fall, leading to lower borrowing costs.
He says:
“We still have to get it sustainably at the target and we have quite an unbalanced mix of components of inflation at the moment. But I’m very encouraged that the path is downwards therefore I do think the path for interest rates will be downwards, gradually.”
Bailey also cautions that interest rates are unlikely to fall back to the record low (just 0.1%) we saw in the Covid-19 pandemic, before the inflation shock of the Ukraine war.
He told KentOnline:
“Where it will settle is a good question. Simple answer is I can’t tell you with any great accuracy. What I would say is ‘will we go back to the very low near zero interest rates that we had until not that long ago’?
“My answer is I would not expect that because what caused interest rates to go that way it was, amongst other things, two very big shocks to the economy.
The financial markets predict UK interest rates could fall to 4.5% by the end of this year, and to 3.5% or lower by the end of 2025.
China’s shares surge after stimulus measures announced
Investors across Asia-Pacific markets have welcomed China’s stimulus measures.
Stocks have surged in Shanghia and Shenzen, driving the CSI300 index up by 3.7% today.
China’s authorities have “set a fire” underneath the country’s equity markets, says Kyle Rodda, senior financial market analyst at Capital.com.
Chinese authorities have set a fire underneath their markets with a raft of new measures to support their financial system and asset prices. Those looking for more direct support to households and fiscal stimulus will be left disappointed by the initiatives.
However, for investors fearful about systemic instability, scarce liquidity and asset price deflation, the policies announced today provide reason for greater optimism about Chinese markets.
While cuts to reverse repo rates and reserve requirements will grease liquidity, the most remarkable move is allowing brokers and funds to tap the PBOC for cash to buy stock
Pound hits two and a half-year high
The pound has hit its highest level in over two years this morning, as investors bet that the Bank of England will cut interest rates slower than the US Federal Reserve.
Sterling has extended its recent rally this morning, hitting $1.3366 for the first time since March 2022.
The pound is strengthening after the Bank of England left interest rates on hold last week, and said borrowing costs must not fall “too fast or by too much”.
That caution contrasts with the Fed, which slashed US rates by half a percentage point last Wednesday.
The markets now expect the Fed to cut rates by another three-quarters of a percent by the end of this year. The Bank of England is only expected to cut by up to half a percent.
The pound has also hit its highest level against the euro in over two years, rising over €1.20. That followed economic data which suggested Germany was sliding into recession, as its manufacturing sector continued to contract.
Introduction: China launches stimulus measures to revive economy
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
China’s central bank has launched a blitz of stimulus measures to support its economy, as policymakers strive to hit Beijing’s growth targets.
Faced with a spluttering economy. the People’s Bank of China has pulled out its bazooka.
First, it is cutting the amount of cash banks must hold on their books (known as the reserve requirements ratio) by half a percentage point (50 basis points). That should free up more money to be lent to customers.
Second, it is lowering several key interest rates. The seven-day repo rate, PBoC’s new benchmark, by 0.2 percentage points to 1.5%. The interest rate on the medium-term lending facility will drop by about 30 basis points, and loan prime rates by 20-25 bps.
Third, there’s more support for the property market. PBoC says it will encourage commercial banks to lower existing mortgage interest rates, which will cut costs for both current and new borrowers.
It is also lowering the down-payment requirements for both first and second homes – to help people get onto the property ladder, and keep sales moving.
Fourthly, PBoC governor Pan Gongsheng announced the central bank will create new monetary policy tools to support the sstable development of the stock market.
All in all – a wide-ranging push, which has pushed shares higher on the Chinese stock exchange.
The package follows signs that China’s economy has been faltering in 2024. Growth slowed to 4.7% year-on-year in the second quarter of the year, down from 5.3% in Q1 – putting Beijing’s 5% growth target at risk.
In July, China’s export growth missed forecasts, and in August manufacturing activity sank to a six-month low.
Economists are sceptical, though, that PBoC’s measures alone will be enough.
Capital Economics analyst Julian Evans-Pritchard says:
“This is the most significant PBOC stimulus package since the early days of the pandemic.
But on its own, it may not be enough.”
The agenda
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9am BST: IFO survey of German business confidence
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2pm BST: Case-Shiller index of US house prices for July
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3pm BST: US consumer confidence report for August