Tuesday 10 June 2014

NO 'BAZOOKA' FROM THE EUROPEAN CENTRAL BANK

The 70th anniversary celebrations of WWII D-day marked the week's historic dimension for the broader public, while capital markets noted the first time that any major central bank has taken interest rates negative. The European Central Bank (ECB) cut interest rates by a very incremental 0.1%, which took the rate at which commercial banks can park their cash surpluses with the Central Bank from 0% to -0.1%, meaning their deposits gradually shrink rather than grow. The rate at which banks can borrow from the ECB for the short term was lowered from 0.25% to 0.15%. While technically marking a historical point (although Denmark recently experimented with a negative rate on a smaller scale), the move is in my opinion more aimed at making a statement rather than making much of a difference. Here is why: In theory the negative rate should encourage banks to lend out the money, rather than deposit it with the central bank and also to pass the negative rate on to their customers, thereby encouraging those to spend the money or invest it. In practice, banks will not be able to pass on the negative rate to privates (because they may choose to hold the deposits in actual notes in safe deposit boxes) or corporates. On the contrary they may increase rather than decrease what they charge for short term loans in order to recover what they lose on their cash surpluses with the central bank. In any case, at such a small scale of change (0.1%!) any real effect ought to be marginal, unless market participants see it as a signal for a change in direction. In this respect - for the readers of the fine print – there were some signs that the ECB may have overcome Germany's past rejection to conduct outright quantitative easing (QE) – more about this further below. Because of the lack of any real surprises, beyond what had been widely expected after specific hints last month, markets appeared underwhelmed and just continued where they had left off before the announcement. This was a gradual advance of stock markets, taking them in the case of Germany and the US to new historical highs, while the UK's is still struggling with the FTSE's 7,000 mark (reminding me of the struggle with the 6,000 mark over the course of 2012!).

Bond yields had finally been moving in parallel to equity markets, until US job market data on Friday came in slightly mediocre (but as expected). This put downward pressure again on yields because bond markets appear to be ricocheting between their own belief that the economy is expanding at a higher rate than Central Banks like to admit which will see rates go up much sooner than advised and on the other hand agreeing with central bankers' view that the expansion is still quite pedestrian, which will not warrant rate rises at least until the middle of 2015 and then only very gradually. The US job growth number aligned with the latter scenario and as a result equity markets and bond markets moved up again in unison in expectation of continued cheap credit fuel.

Economic outlook data from the UK services and construction sectors provided continued evidence of the persistency of the UK's economic revival. At the same time Nationwide's house price index reading showed a slowing of the growth rate compared to April, however, this still makes an unsustainable annual growth rate of 11%. Unsustainable not because current mortgage costs are decimating UK homeowners' disposable incomes – they are not - no more than the historical average anyway, see our special at the end – but because they have the potential to become a formidable millstone for consumers in the future, when interest rates eventually have to rise. This is unless the economy can continue to grow unconstrained of fears of premature rate rises which should finally feed into improving real wages, making higher mortgage burdens less threatening.  We therefore expect the Bank of England to make further use of their macro prudential intervention toolbox fairly soon and force banks to put even higher minimum requirements in the way of mortgage seekers, but leave rates unchanged. It can also not be long now before the government will have to restrict the second part of its Help to Buy scheme of mortgage guarantees for any home purchase to just new builds.

For more news, visit: www.kassiusannuities.co.uk

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