BOE CHECKLIST: What to Look for in Minutes, Inflation Report
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)
People
Mark Carney (Bank of England)
Benjamin Broadbent (Bank of England)
Kristin Forbes (Bank of England)
Michael Saunders (Bank of England)
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UUID: 7947283
(Bloomberg) -- The BOE will simultaneously publish its rate decision and minutes at noon London time. Governor Mark Carney will hold a press conference 30 minutes later.
Alert: HALISTER1- Bloomberg Intelligence’s Dan Hanson says the central bank is likely to raise its projections for economic growth and predict a larger inflation overshoot; see preview here
- Key questions include:
- The bank had indicated there was still a chance of further easing in its September minutes; as recently as mid-October, analysts in a Bloomberg survey expected a cut in rates to 0.10%
- That was before the much stronger-than-forecast 3Q GDP data
- Analysts no longer expect any easing this month; Goldman pushed back its BOE rate-cut call to Feb. from Nov. and HSBC no longer expects the bank to cut rates this month
- Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect an 9-0 vote to leave rates unchanged
- Governor Mark Carney said this week he will stay in office for a year longer after his term ends in 2018 to guide the economy through Britain’s split from the EU
- Early last month, Deputy Governor Ben Broadbent said the effect of a lack of clarity about the U.K.’s future trading relationships is likely to be insidious as “decisions to expand, that might otherwise have been taken, are delayed”
- Money markets are pricing about 30% chance of a 10bps rate cut in the early part of 2017; pricing for a 10bps rate hike in late 2017 has faded, having jumped to around 50/50 after better GDP data last week
- GBP is trading about 6% lower than at the time of the last Inflation Report, when the pound had already fallen sharply
- This time around, people will be looking for any clue on how the Bank would respond to further pound decline as analysts say a hard Brexit could see further weakness
- Carney last month said the central bank isn’t indifferent to the pound’s slide
- The weaker pound means the BOE will likely raise its inflation forecasts, expecting an even larger overshoot
- On Oct. 14, MPC member Kristin Forbes said the days of inflation bouncing around zero are gone, while economists at Niesr said inflation could peak at around 4% in 2H 2017
- Mark Carney told a House of Lords Committee in London that there are limits to the MPC’s willingness to look through an overshoot of inflation
- In its August Inflation Report, the BOE said available evidence suggested growth would slow to 0.1% in 3Q; by the time of the September meeting, these projections were revised to “0.3% in the mature data and for 0.2% in the preliminary release”
- Preliminary data though showed growth of 0.5%, spurring analyst to expect the bank to lift forecasts at today’s meeting
- The MPC’s Michael Saunders said Oct. 4, GDP is likely to grow more than 1% in 2017, compared with the BOE’s prediction of 0.8% growth in its August Inflation Report
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)
People
Mark Carney (Bank of England)
Benjamin Broadbent (Bank of England)
Kristin Forbes (Bank of England)
Michael Saunders (Bank of England)
To de-activate this alert, click here
UUID: 7947283