Pound hits all-time low against dollar after
mini-budget rocks markets
Odds of sterling hitting parity with dollar jump, as
analysts say UK bond market ‘getting smoked’ by giveaway
The pound has plunged to its lowest value against the
US dollar since Britain went decimal in 1971.
Graeme
Wearden
Mon 26 Sep
2022 08.06 BST
The pound
has hit an all-time low against the dollar after the bonanza of tax cuts and
spending measures in Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget threatened to undermine
confidence in the UK.
The pound
plunged nearly 5% at one point to $1.0327, its lowest since Britain went
decimal in 1971, as belief in the UK’s economic management and assets
evaporated. Even after stumbling back to $1.05, the currency was down 7% in two
sessions, after the UK chancellor pledged over the weekend to pursue more tax
cuts.
City
economists suggested the slump in the pound could force the Bank of England
into an emergency interest rate rise to support the currency.
Paul Dales,
the chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said the Bank could come out with
“tough talk” supported by a large and immediate interest rate hike.
“That could
involve something like a 100bps or 150bps hike in interest rates (to 3.25%/3.75%),
perhaps as soon as this morning,” Dales told clients.
The shadow
chancellor, Rachel Reeves, told Times Radio she was “incredibly worried” by the
market reaction to the mini-budget.
As
Asia-Pacific markets opened on Monday, Ray Attrill, National Australia Bank’s
head of currency strategy, said: “It’s a case of shoot first and ask questions
later, as far as UK assets are concerned.”
Marc
Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex, called the
currency’s record plunge “incredible” and said there was bound to be
speculation of an emergency Bank of England meeting and rate hike.
Chris
Weston, the head of research at the brokerage firm Pepperstone, said the pound
was “the whipping boy” of the G10 foreign exchange market, while the UK bond
market was “getting smoked” thanks to Kwarteng’s £45bn debt-financed
tax-cutting package.
“Investors
are searching out a response from the Bank of England. They’re saying this is
not sustainable, when you’ve got deteriorating growth and a twin deficit.”
“The
funding requirement needed to pay for the mini-budget means either we need to
see far better growth or higher bond yields to incentive capital inflows,”
Weston said.
Kwarteng’s
mini-budget caused a rout in UK financial markets on Friday. Sterling shed four
cents to hit a 37-year low of $1.0856, while the jump in the cost of government
borrowing was the biggest in a single day in decades.
“The price
of easy fiscal policy was laid bare by the market,” said Sanjay Raja, chief UK
economist at Deutsche Bank. He said Kwarteng’s tax cuts were adding to
medium-term inflationary pressures and were “raising the risk of a near-term
balance of payments crisis”.
“A plan to
get the public finances on a sustainable footing will be necessary but not
sufficient for markets to regain confidence in an economy sporting large twin
deficits,” Raja said.
The UK
current account deficit, which includes the trade balance and the net income
from foreign investment and transfers, had already widened to a record level
this year. The jump in the cost of imported energy is adding to this deficit,
which is pushing the pound down towards levels that make UK assets attractive
to foreign buyers again.
On Friday
afternoon, Bloomberg’s options pricing model showed there was a 26% chance the
pound and the dollar hitting parity within the next six months, up from 14% on
Thursday.
Nouriel
Roubini, the economist who predicted the 2008 financial crisis, warned bluntly
that the UK was starting to be priced like an emerging market, and was heading
back to the 1970s.
But Paul
Krugman, a Nobel economics laureate, pointed out that the pound’s depreciation
actually improved Britain’s net international investment position.
Krugman
said a 1970s-style sterling crisis was unlikely to occur unless the Bank of
England chooses to monetise the debt, rather than offsetting the fiscal
stimulus with tighter monetary policy.
Kwarteng
tried to play down the financial reaction to Friday’s mini-budget, telling BBC
One’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg he was focused on boosting longer-term
growth, not on short-term market moves,
“As
chancellor of the exchequer, I don’t comment on market movements. What I am
focused on is growing the economy and making sure that Britain is an attractive
place to invest,” he said.
Kwarteng
also indicated that Liz Truss plans to radically reshape the UK economy with
even more tax cuts and fewer regulations.
The Bank of
England is expected to raise interest rates higher to combat the inflationary
impact of the mini-budget, as a weakening pound drives up costs of imports. The
money markets are pricing a doubling of UK interest rates to more than 5% by
next summer.
After the
mini-budget, the UK Debt Management Office plans to raise an additional £72bn
before next April, raising the financing remit in 2022-23 to £234bn.
“Sterling
is in the firing line as traders are turning their backs on all things
British,” said David Madden, a market analyst at Equiti Capital. “There is a
creeping feeling the extra government borrowing that is in the pipeline will
severely weigh on the UK economy.”
The FTSE
100 tumbled 2% to a three-month closing low on Friday. So far this year, the
index of blue-chip companies has lost 5% – much less than European or US
markets – helped by oil companies, and exporters boosted by the weak pound.
“The
chancellor’s high-risk strategy could entail a larger FTSE 100 correction
before the year is out,” said Charles Archer, a financial writer at online
trading platform IG. “As monetary policy tightens, mortgage and debt defaults
rise, while investment in growth falls. This could render the
mini-budget entirely ineffective.”


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário