Bank of England prepares
to cut rates into uncharted territory
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[August 01, 2016]
By David Milliken
LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England
looks ready to cut interest rates for the first time since 2009 on
Thursday, seeking to stop Britain's vote to leave the European Union
from kicking the country into recession.
It may even go a step further and pump billions of pounds into
financial markets.
Economic surveys have pointed to a sharp slowdown since the BoE
wrong footed markets just over two weeks ago, when it kept rates on
hold while it considered a bigger, unspecified package of stimulus,
which policymakers said was likely in August.
Manufacturing figures on Monday showed the most widespread downturn
since early 2013. Earlier survey data for the much larger services
sector pointed to the sharpest contraction since 2009.
There is a chance these reports reflect a knee-jerk reaction to the
vote, so the question the BoE faces this week is how aggressively to
react.
BoE chief economist Andy Haldane said he wanted to use "a
sledgehammer to crack a nut", but another policymaker, Kristin
Forbes, said the central bank should stay calm and not rush into a
decision until more hard data was available.
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Most economists polled by Reuters expect the BoE to cut interest
rates by at least a quarter percentage point to 0.25 percent, and
almost half say it will restart its quantitative easing bond
purchase program, on hold since late 2012. [BOE/INT]
"If you're heading towards a waterfall, it is better to start
paddling than to wait until you're at the edge," said Bank of
America Merrill Lynch economist Robert Wood, who previously worked
as a BoE forecaster.
Wood said looser monetary policy would take months to help the
economy. He predicts the BoE will announce 50 billion pounds ($66
billion) of asset purchases on top of the 375 billion of government
bonds bought between 2009 and 2012.
Others say the BoE's Monetary Policy Committee might be concerned
more QE at a time of record-low global bond yields could have
unpredictable consequences for banks and markets.
"Taken at face value, recent survey data point to a significant
recession. However, there may be some element of a knee-jerk
reaction and the MPC may wish to wait for more data before making
such a big call," HSBC economist Simon Wells said.
Surveys carried out in the first half of July may reflect the
temporary political disarray as David Cameron stepped down as prime
minister and the Conservative Party hunted for a successor. Some
data, including the BoE's own in-house research, point to a fairly
modest reaction to the referendum.
DIVIDED MPC
BoE Governor Mark Carney will present the policy decision in a news
conference, but is unlikely to have the full support of the MPC.
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Pedestrians walk past the Bank of England in the City of London,
Britain June 28, 2016. REUTERS/Paul Hackett/File Photo
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Forbes, a U.S. academic who serves as an external member of the rate-setting
body, said last month looser monetary policy had costs as well as benefits, and
the BoE should wait for better data to calibrate its response.
The effectiveness of rate cuts and asset purchases is also in doubt at a time
when 10-year British government borrowing costs <GB10YT=RR> have already hit a
record low 0.7 percent.
"At this stage monetary policy is almost out of juice," Bank of America's Wood
said. Ultimately the government was likely to need to spend more or cut taxes to
boost the economy, he added.
HSBC's Wells - also a former BoE staffer - said it was probably too soon for
Carney to say the BoE would act like the Bank of Japan and buy bonds in support
of a fiscal stimulus which Britain's government has only hinted at so far.
"Although the BoE may tease us with these ideas ... (this) poses significant
policy risks for the future and potentially undermines the BoE's operational
independence," Wells said.
More likely is for the BoE to extend its Funding for Lending Scheme, which
offers banks cheap finance in return for higher lending to the private sector
and was in the process of being phased out as the economy recovered.
Other measures are also possible to ensure lower interest rates do not hurt
financial institutions' incentives to lend.
The BoE will also release a quarterly update to its growth and inflation
forecasts. Sterling's 12 percent fall since the referendum is likely to trigger
a forecast that inflation will exceed its 2 percent target next year as imports
become more costly.
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Growth is certain to be revised down, with the main question whether the central
bank forecasts a recession. Before the referendum, Carney said a material
slowdown, not a recession, was his central scenario if Britain voted to leave.
(Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)
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