Showing posts with label UK pound. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UK pound. Show all posts

Friday 23 January 2009

What's really wrong with Sterling?



What's really wrong with Sterling?
The pound is suffering its worst ever fall in value. Why is it happening and what are the implications? Edmund Conway, Economics Editor, has the answers

Last Updated: 10:13PM GMT 22 Jan 2009

Taking a pounding: UK currency is in crisis
How bad is this fall in the pound? In a word: hideous.

Measured against a basket of other currencies – the best way in this globalised era to test a currency's strength – the pound has fallen in the past year by around a quarter.
This is more than any previous devaluation in the past century – greater even than in 1931, when, under Ramsay MacDonald, the UK was forced to abandon the gold standard and saw the pound plummet by more than 24 per cent against the dollar. Greater than after Black Wednesday and the abandonment of the Exchange Rate Mechanism; worse than in 1967, when Harold Wilson was forced to make an extraordinary televised statement to the nation claiming that the "pound in your pocket" would not be worth any less after his devaluation.
As anyone who has been overseas recently will know, it has fallen from over $2 against the dollar to under $1.40. This week it touched the lowest level since the Plaza Accord of 1985 – in which year the pound very nearly went to parity against the US currency. Against the euro, the pound has slid from €1.35 to just above €1 in the past year.
In practice this means that anyone travelling to the Continent will find it tough to get anything more than a euro for every pound they want exchanged, after the bureau de change has taken its cut and commission.
For Gordon Brown, who mocked the Conservatives in 1992, it is acutely embarrassing. Back then, he said: "A weak currency arises from a weak economy which in turn is the result of a weak Government." This time he is staying conspicuously quiet about the whole thing.

But why is sterling sliding?

In large part because it reflects Britain's economic prospects. The UK is facing a nasty recession – one that is likely to be as bad as any experienced by the Western world. House prices are falling at the fastest ratesince the 1930s, unemployment is on the rise and will soon climb beyond two million, consumer spending is sliding.
In such circumstances, investors are naturally likely to withdraw their money from the UK. On the one hand, they will sell sterling shares and investments since they are likely to fall in value as a result of the recession. On the other, those who invest their cash in the UK will pull it out of the country, since the Bank of England is cutting interest rates as a response to the slump. Any money in sterling in a UK bank account is earning very little interest, so overseas investors calculate they might as well take it elsewhere.

How worried ought we to be?

If the above was all that was happening, not unduly. In a world of floating exchange rates, the falling pound is not merely a symptom of the disease (the recession) but its cure. All else being equal, a weak pound should boost the exports of British companies, since it makes their products cheaper than those of their overseas rivals.
Machinery produced in the north of England is fast becoming cheaper than that produced in eastern Europe. And this goes not just for visible trade – actual physical goods – but for invisible trades such as legal or financial services.
So, although Britain's manufacturing sector has shrunk significantly since the 1980s and 1990s, the comparative value of UK products should nevertheless help boost the economy. The same goes for tourism, which has already picked up significantly as foreigners come to the UK to pick up bargains. London's days as Europe's most expensive city are well behind it.
The problem, however, is that all else is not equal at the moment: the appetite abroad for exports of any type has dried up in a way never before experienced. From Europe to the Americas to Asia, trade has almost entirely seized up as the recession has turned global. And let's not mention financial and legal services – the appetite for which has evaporated.
In the 1990s and the 2000s, successive governments decided to focus the UK's economy on financial services. A decision was taken to put almost all our economic eggs in one basket. Unfortunately, that basket has come crashing to the ground.

So is this now a full-blown sterling crisis?

Until recently, it wasn't a crisis. There are, broadly speaking, two types of devaluation – one benign, the other far less so. The good one is much as described above – a competitive devaluation in the pound which, over time, provides a cure. After the pound fell in 1992, it ushered in years of recovery and then prosperity for the economy.
The bad version is a full-scale crisis – a run on the pound. It is a vote of no-confidence in a country's economic policies, and occurs when investors start pulling their cash out of the UK not because of a temporary period of recession but because they are worried about the direction the economy is taking (over years and decades rather than months).
In the months up until this week it was possible to argue that this represented a competitive devaluation, and would be a boon for exporters. All of that changed on Monday. Following Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling's announcement of a second bail-out package for struggling banks, the pound suffered what can be described as a minor run. Investors took fright that the UK was drawing closer to insolvency, and as a response sold off their stocks of government debt.
It is difficult to overstate the significance of this. Britain's power and prosperity since the earliest days of the Union have been founded on its reputation for being a good risk.
Whereas other countries, such as Argentina and Russia, have occasionally defaulted on their debts, Britain's government has always been among the best borrowers in the world. For the first time in decades this is being questioned.
The rumour around the market this week was that Standard & Poor's, a ratings agency which tells traders what has and does not have the stamp of approval, was set to downgrade Britain's government sovereign debt. The agency has since denied this, but the UK fulfils many of the criteria for such a humiliating decision.

Does it really matter if Britain's creditworthiness comes under question?

Yes – immensely. Britain has a large current account deficit – of about £7.7 billion. This means we, as a nation, spend more money than we generate each year. This is no problem while we can borrow the difference, but that £7.7 billion chunk has to come from overseas investors. Should they stop lending to the UK, Britons would face a sudden, painful jolt and their living standards would fall even faster and more painfully than they are at the moment.
The Government would have to seek assistance from the International Monetary Fund which would, most likely, dole out a baleful dose of economic medicine – higher interest rates, lower government spending and immediate austerity.
Although, in the long run, Britain does need to borrow less and save more, such an adjustment should ideally take place over years, not weeks.

Isn't this all really the fault of the bankers as well as the Government?

Indeed it is. Now that the majority of the banking system is effectively nationalised (and the Government has promised to insure the nastiest debts of the remaining private banks) the taxpayer is effectively standing behind another massive liability. The banking system has about $4.4 trillion of foreign debts, and most analysts predict that around £200 billion of these could default.
What scared investors this week was the sudden realisation that the Government, rather than the banks, will have to pay the bill. The UK, unlike Iceland, does not have the luxury of being able to default on those foreign debts (remember the fracas when Britons faced losing their savings in Icelandic banks?)
Were the UK to do the same as Iceland, the size of Britain's liabilities are such that it would trigger an international panic and financial meltdown worse than when Lehman Brothers collapsed last year.

This all sounds unremittingly gloomy. Is there any solution?

Mainly to hope that the economic medicine served up by the Bank of England and its fellow central banks does the trick. As long as house prices are falling and unemployment is rising, the liabilities of the Government will swell and the pound will remain weak. But when, eventually, the economic backdrop improves, so should the financial outlook, and, eventually, the pound.
However, there is little hope of returning to the heady days of a near-80p euro and a $2 pound. The pound was significantly stronger than it ought to have been over the previous decade. It is probably undervalued now, and if all goes well it should bounce back in the coming years.
However, everything now depends on trust: that trust will return to the beleaguered financial system; that investors will start to trust the Government again and that Britons trust that there will be life after the recession.


Wednesday 21 January 2009

Sterling slumps to eight-year low after second bank bail-out

Sterling slumps to eight-year low after second bank bail-out

Sterling tumbled below the $1.40 mark against the dollar for the first time in almost a decade and fell against the rest of the world's major currencies as the UK Government's second bail-out of the country's banks underlined the dangers facing the economy.

By Angela MonaghanLast Updated: 6:37PM GMT 20 Jan 2009


The pound, which was trading above the $2 mark less than 12 months ago, slumped to below the $1.40 mark for the first time since June 2001 in morning trading in London after registering a fall of more than three cents yesterday.
Currency traders have been aggressively selling the pound as the depth of the recession facing the UK becomes clearer. Interest rates are now at 1.5pc and most analysts expect the Bank of England to continue cutting close to zero in an effort to get money moving around the economy again.
"Sterling has struggled due to the announcement of the new policy measures, in addition to reports of big losses in the UK banking sector," analysts at UBS said this morning.
Analysts are concerned that the second bail-out will substantially increase Britain's debt beyond the 8pc of gross domestic product projected by the Chancellor Alistair Darling at the Pre-Budget Report in November.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown admitted yesterday that he does not know how much the second bail-out of the banks will cost.
Steve Barrow, currency strategist at Standard Bank, predicts that the pound will slide to around $1.35 against the dollar over the next month or two.
He argues that although the US banking system has been hit by similar difficulties to the UK, sterling is particularly vulnerable to a weak performance from the financial sector and banking shares.
"One clear reason for the closer relationship in the UK is that the dollar can act as a safe-haven in times of global stress," he said.
Sterling is now down 28pc against the dollar in the past year and in December sterling teetered on the brink of parity with the euro for the first time.
This morning it tumbled more than 2p to 92.75 and fell to a record low of 124.77 versus the yen.
Jim Rogers, the co-founder of Quantum fund with George Soros, today told Bloomberg News that “I would urge you to sell any sterling you might have.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financetopics/recession/4295391/Sterling-slumps-to-eight-year-low-after-second-bank-bail-out.html

Thursday 15 January 2009

Pound heads back to dark days of 1990

Pound heads back to dark days of 1990

By Edmund Conway, Economics Editor
Last Updated: 1:18AM BST 30 Mar 2007


Economists have raised the alarm over the future health of the pound, after new figures showed the current account has yawned to the biggest deficit since 1990.

They warned that sterling faced a significant fall in the coming years as investors realised that the UK is living well beyond its means.

The deficit on the balance of payments rose to a record high of £12.7bn in the final quarter of 2006, the Office for National Statistics said. As a percentage of Britain's gross domestic product, this is 3.8pc, the highest level seen since 1990.

Experts said that the increase in the shortfall was the latest sign of the North Sea's demise as an energy producer and warned that as Britain's oil and gas exports fell in the coming years, the current account would widen to worrying levels.

The increase in the gap was far bigger than economists expected, and they warned that this could have severe consequences for the long-term health of the UK economy. A country with a large current account deficit will often see its currency depreciate in the following years, they said.

However, analysts also warned that the numbers indicated that Britain was starting to lose its talent at earning an unusually high return on its assets abroad.

In previous years, Britain's current account has been supported by the fact that UK firms have tended to earn more on their overseas investments than foreign companies have in the UK.

Michael Saunders, chief UK economist at Citigroup, said this appeared to be changing. He said this rate of return was dropping, and warned that there would soon be "some pretty appalling current account figures", saying the deficit could pass 5pc within two years. This is still far short of the US, where some expect the deficit to surpass 7pc in the coming years, but is still extremely high by the standards of developed countries.

Furthermore, said Mr Saunders, the current flow of money into the UK from the Middle East, which is helping to support the pound, would not last forever.

"So far, the worsening current account deficit has not been a big negative for sterling," he said. "But, at the very least, the worsening current account suggests that the Monetary Policy Committee is unlikely to be able to rely on sterling strength as an alternative source of restraint, rather than higher interest rates.

"And, if sterling weakens (in the absence of UK economic weakness) then the UK's medium term upside inflation risks - and need for interest rates to rise - would be correspondingly greater."

A Treasury spokesman said: "Underlying growth in exports is expected to remain robust this year as growth in UK export markets strengthens on the back of stronger demand from the euro area."

The figures also revealed a sudden dive in the UK's savings ratio, indicating that many Britons are being forced to dig into their savings to finance their current spending. The ratio, which charts the amount of national income being set aside, was 3.7pc in the fourth quarter of 2006. This is the lowest level since 2004, and is far lower than the long-run average.

The drop in savings could prefigure a fall in consumer spending in the coming months as shoppers cut back on their purchases, experts predicted.

And in a further sign that households are tightening their belts, the pace of house price inflation started to slow last month, according to figures from Nationwide. It said this measure of annual property price increases dropped from 10pc to 9.3pc.

After a year of unexpectedly strong growth, many now think the property market is cooling noticeably, although in pockets of the country including London and the South-East, a shortage of supply and massive demand for prime housing have pushed prices higher.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/2806502/Pound-heads-back-to-dark-days-of-1990.html

Spanish-style catastrophe

Staying out of the euro has spared us a Spanish-style catastrophe
Half-built flats and soaring unemployment show that the boom has turned to gloom on the Costa del Sol. And it's a fate that could easily have befallen Britain.

By Jeff RandallLast Updated: 5:43AM GMT 09 Jan 2009
Comments 227 Comment on this article
Marbella
For a place that's called the Sunshine Coast, Spain's Costa del Sol was unusually wet and cold last week. Friday and Saturday were particularly miserable in Marbella, as the rain lashed across the main promenade, forcing restaurants to bring in tables and pull down shutters.
It was as though the weather gods had decided to reflect the country's economic outlook – which is becoming darker by the day. What many in Spain had regarded (foolishly) as an eternal summer of expansion, driven by a breakneck construction boom, has turned into a winter of plunging property prices, failing businesses and an epidemic of redundancies.
Spain's traditional new year greeting is próspero año nuevo. But even in this part of Andalucia, a favourite playground of wealthy sunseekers and golf fanatics, it is hard to find locals who are expecting prosperity in 2009. For a growing number of workers and small-business owners, anything better than a sharp decline in income will be greeted as a triumph.
Like the toros bravos that die in the corrida, Spain's bull market began with impressive vigour but ended up being dragged off through the dirt. Unemployment hit three million yesterday, about 13 per cent of the workforce (double the rate in the UK), the worst it has been for 12 years. Nearly one million of those without jobs have lost them during the past 12 months.
The speed of descent, from fiesta into crisis, has shocked the country's political class and commentariat. Inflation has dropped from 5.3 per cent to 1.5 per cent since the summer. According to the newspaper El Pais: "This situation was impensable [unthinkable] in July".
As historians begin to assess damage from the credit crunch, Spain will surely be singled out as a classic study for what can go wrong inside a monetary union when the policy requirements of its members become hopelessly misaligned. It is simply not possible to pursue the best interests of every participant when some nations are running trade and fiscal surpluses while others clock up huge deficits.
Ten years after it was launched, the euro is propelling Spain towards disaster. In giving up control of domestic interest rates to the European Central Bank, Madrid handed over a vital instrument of macroeconomic management. It is learning to regret that.
For the early part of this millennium, that loss of power seemed not to matter: Spain's outrageous (and in some cases illegal) construction frenzy hid a multitude of sins. At the peak, about 800,000 homes were being built annually on the basis that demand from foreign buyers was limitless.
That dream has vanished, along with the over-supply of cheap money that funded it. Drive down the E-15, the main motorway link between Malaga and Gibraltar, and you will see block after block of half-built apartments, connected neither to essential utilities nor to financial reality. They stand as temples to a religion that ceased to exist when the bubble popped.
The Spanish economy is weak; it needs lower interest rates and a softer currency. Such a prospect, however, doesn't suit Germany, the eurozone's dominant force, so Madrid has to sit and suffer while its people cry for help.
Discomfort is palpable in tourist centres where the purchasing power of British visitors and second-home owners has played a pivotal role in boosting local enterprise. Germans and Swedes have been important, also, but it is on the British that the leisure sector in southern Spain has depended most.
A quick scan of the exchange-rate charts explains why. In the summer of 2000, about 18 months after it was launched, the euro was out of fashion on the world's currency markets. At that time, £1 bought €1.75, making British travellers feel especially wealthy when holidaying in Spain.
Today, however, as the British economy sinks into recession, prompting the Bank of England to slash interest rates to 1.5 per cent (the lowest level in the central bank's 315-year history), it is sterling that looks like a six-stone weakling.
Many in the queue at Gatwick airport's Travelex desk last weekend were shocked to discover that the pound had fallen to below parity against the euro. For them, Spain has become an expensive experience. Old jokes about Costa Notta Lotta are no longer relevant, much less funny.
I was treated by a friend to a round of golf at Rio Real, a middle-ranking course, that is by no means among the priciest. He was charged £172 for two (no buggy). Dinner for three in a modest pizza joint came to £75. One must assume that hoteliers from Morecambe to Margate are cheering wildly.
Competing currencies invariably fluctuate on a daily basis, but not all in the City are expecting a swift recovery of sterling against the euro (even though it has picked up in the past few days). HSBC believes: "In the UK… a weaker currency seems desirable to policy makers… in our eyes all roads lead to a stronger euro."
If that analysis proves correct, parts of Spain will face devastation, and social policies that seemed generous during the go-go years will quickly become unaffordable. For example, in some instances the state pays 70 per cent of salary for up to two years when a worker is made unemployed. How will that be funded if, as some are predicting, Spain's jobless total reaches four million in 2010?
Adding to Madrid's woes is the extraordinary influx of five million immigrants, who boosted the population by about 15 per cent between 1998 and last year. It was always assumed that in tough times many would return home. But for penniless fruit pickers from Africa, life in Spain, even in the harshest economic climate, is often better than what they left behind. The number of foreigners claiming dole payments has doubled and there are mounting tensions as native job-seekers slip down the food chain.
Marbella is not used to life on a budget. Shopkeepers, newspaper vendors and bar staff seem baffled by the downturn in their fortunes. On Sunday, my family and I had dinner in a seafront bodega and were the only customers all night. "What has happened to los Ingleses?" asked the waiter.
The answer is that the United Kingdom never joined the euro. As a result, our government and monetary authorities are free to adopt policies that suit our needs. In today's circumstances, that means the freedom to live with a devaluing currency. This hurts those of us who can still afford to visit Spain, and is unfortunate for British pensioners living abroad, but is a small price to pay for the revival of our domestic industries.
Had Britain been locked into Europe's single currency, at an exchange rate far higher than today's, there is good reason to believe that we, too, would be suffering double-digit unemployment. You won't read this very often under my byline, but Gordon Brown played a blinder in keeping us out.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/jeffrandall/4177828/Staying-out-of-the-euro-has-spared-us-a-Spanish-style-catastrophe.html

Saturday 20 December 2008

Sterling: Why it can't stop falling

Sterling: Why it can't stop falling

By Edward Hadas, breakingviews.comLast Updated: 1:43PM GMT 19 Dec 2008
Comments 4 Comment on this article

The pound just won’t stop falling. As of Friday morning, the UK currency was down 5pc against the euro over a week, and 17pc since mid-October. This decline is all too justified.
Foreign exchange traders have short attention spans and a long list of concerns. And right now the pound ticks almost every box to fail a summary health check.
Does the UK need foreign cash? That’s a big tick. The country’s balance of payments deficit is running at 3pc of GDP. Are yields low, making government debt - the holding of choice for foreigners - unattractive? That’s another tick in the box. The already low 2pc policy interest rate is set to head towards zero.
Worries about the overall financial system merit a tick too. UK banks expanded their balance sheets in the boom with an abandon usually seen in developing countries like Argentina and Turkey. The subsequent mess could end in blanket nationalisation, with all the risks of the politicised, inefficient lending decisions that often come with state control.
Now for the double tick. Currency traders don’t like governments that run big deficits, which often end in inflation. The UK government is already planning to borrow an awesome 8pc of GDP - and is likely to borrow much more.
About the only bonus for sterling right now is inflation, which is falling in the UK as it is everywhere. But even that might not last, as the weak pound drives up the price of imports, equivalent to 33pc of GDP.
For more agenda-setting financial insight, visit www.breakingviews.com
After such a rush of sterling selling, a brief rebound is possible. For longer-term optimists on the pound - yes, there are a few still out there - the main hope is that a cheap currency will spur exports. But before the Germans and Chinese can be tempted by cheaper goods from the UK, the country has to produce them. That won’t be easy, no matter how low the pound falls. The UK has moved away from manufacturing more than any other rich country. Now it is too short on intellectual and physical capacity to profit from the price advantage provided by sterling’s fall.
It will take more UK pain before there is much sterling gain.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/breakingviewscom/3850857/Sterling-Why-it-cant-stop-falling.html