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(Dec 20): Britain ran a smaller-than-expected budget deficit last month as a past lull in inflation pushed down interest paid on
(Dec 20): Britain ran a smaller-than-expected budget deficit last month as a past lull in inflation pushed down interest paid on government bonds, giving a small boost to finance minister Rachel Reeves who has been under pressure following her budget announcement.
Public sector net borrowing in November was £11.249 billion (US$14.06 billion or RM63.4 billion), the Office for National Statistics said on Friday. Economists polled by Reuters had a median forecast of £13 billion for headline public sector net borrowing.
The data showed the challenge Reeves faces to meet her new fiscal rules with the economy losing momentum — the Bank of England on Thursday forecast zero growth in the last three months of 2024 — and inflation rising again.
"What will worry government is that recent economic indicators such as weak GDP growth and rising inflation are flashing amber," said Alison Ring, director of public sector and taxation at the ICAEW trade body for accountants.
"Money remains extremely tight and that is unlikely to change any time soon."
Government borrowing has been higher than expected by economists polled by Reuters in eight of 11 months so far in 2024 and the reading for October was revised up by more than £800 million.
The lower-than-expected deficit in November reflected a £1.8-billion reduction in the compensation applied to the government's inflation-linked debt as the retail price index fell 0.3% during September.
That drop in prices fully unwound in October and November.
Reeves on Oct 30 announced the biggest tax increases in three decades — most of them from higher social security contributions paid by employers — as she promised to balance day-to-day spending with tax revenues by the end of the decade.
But she also plans to increase borrowing sharply in the coming years as the new Labour government seeks to improve public services and invest more in infrastructure than had been planned by the previous Conservative administration.
The government borrowed £113.2 billion over the first eight months of the 2024/25 financial year, roughly unchanged compared with the same point in 2023/24.
Reeves has described her budget as set of one-off measures to stabilise the public finances.
Crude oil prices were on track for yet another weekly loss earlier today as pessimism about demand growth in China continued to dominate markets.
At the time of writing Brent crude was trading at $72.45 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate was changing hands for $69.91 per barrel, both down from opening in Asia. Reuters reported the benchmarks could end the week some 3% lower than they started it.
The big reason for the decline was the latest demand forecast about China, issued earlier in the week by its very own Sinopec. The company said oil demand growth in China would peak in three years at a daily demand level of some 16 million barrels or a total of 800 million metric tons.
The forecast comes days after the other state-owned energy giant, CNPC, predicted oil demand in the world’s largest oil importer may well peak next year, driven down by electric cars and LNG-powered trucks. By 2035, forecasts say, half the cars on Chinese roads will be electric.
This was enough to depress prices and the bearish mood also received some support from the jump in the U.S. dollar following the Federal Reserve’s latest rate decision. That decision saw the greenback shoot up to the highest in two years—a development that is usually negative for oil prices as the commodity is traded predominantly in U.S. dollars.
Supply forecasts have also weighed on crude oil prices this week. Several forecasters recently reported they expected the oil market to swing into a surplus next year—or remain in surplus if their assumption is for an already existing supply overhang. JP Morgan became the latest to sound a bearish note, saying it forecast a supply surplus of 1.2 million bpd in 2025 thanks to non-OPEC production growth, which the bank predicted at 1.8 million barrels daily. OPEC, on the other hand, will keep output at current levels, JP Morgan analysts said.
The Federal Reserve (Fed)’s decision to cut rates by 25bp was fully meaningless and the incoming data is a proof. The US Q3 growth was revised to 3.1% from 2.8% printed earlier, the sales growth was revised higher from 3 to 3.3% and core PCE priced – though lower than the quarter before – was also revised slightly higher to 2.20%, raising worries that even the two rate cuts from the Fed next year would be too much.
As such, the early gains were given back and the S&P500 and Nasdaq closed in the negative, the Dow Jones was flat while small and mid cap stocks saw no appetite either. Sharing the headlines with Powell, Trump threatens people of his own party to dump a bipartisan deal and risk a government shutdown if they don’t push to raise or suspend the national debt limit under Biden, so he can spend wholeheartedly when he comes to office. The US yield curve is steepening, investors are not willing to buy longer-dated maturities on prospects of higher long-term inflation and ballooning debt. And the US dollar advances toward the strongest levels in more than 2 years leaving other majors under the shadow before Xmas.
The EURUSD failed to stay above the 1.04 mark yesterday and is struggling to hold ground near the 1.0350 level, the Stoxx 600 is racing toward the 500 support, while Cable settles below the 1.25 mark on the back of a dovish no-change that the Bank of England (BoE) delivered at yesterday’s MPC meeting. Three MPC members instead of two (expected by analysts) voted to cut the rates at this week’s meeting. The other six opted for no change – wary of reigniting inflation as the government prepares to increase spending to boost growth, and as Trump threatens the world with eye-watering tariffs. Interestingly, Governor Andrew Bailey – who is clearly not the most popular central banker – had the merit of sounding rational yesterday by saying that the ‘world is too uncertain’ to commit to cut borrowing costs in February. War, Trump, climate change – there’s too much happening for anyone to claim they see the future with clarity. But one good news for the UK is that the United Kingdom is not as concerned as – say the EU, China, Canada and Mexico – by the Trump tariffs and the latter could help the British assets cope with Trump better than their peers. British stocks trade with around 40% valuation discount compared to the MSCI World peers, it has one of the fastest dividend growth among the European and American indices and they returned 10% to their investors these years including reinvested dividends. If inflation U-turns as geopolitical and trade tensions worsen, the FTSE 100 stocks will be in a good position to benefit from these developments.
Elsewhere – and this is amusing – inflation in Japan accelerated in November. The headline figure climbed back to 2.9%, the highest in three months, while core inflation advanced to 2.7%, also a three-month high. Why is this funny? Because just yesterday, the Bank of Japan (BoJ) decided to pass on a rate hike, with officials seemingly too cautious to act amid uncertainties over Trump-era policies and geopolitical tensions. Meanwhile, Japan’s interest rate sits at 0.25%, while inflation is running near 3%. The Japanese have a different relationship with inflation – they don’t despise it as much as we do. After all, decades of deflation, which is far harder to reverse, have shaped their perspective – a lesson the Chinese are now learning the hard way. But the BoJ’s decisions still feel illogical, as they don’t align with a conventional policy framework. Consequently, the USDJPY is giving back some earlier gains on the stronger-than-expected inflation figures and speculation that rising inflation might prompt BoJ action. However, since the BoJ doesn’t really tie interest rates to inflation, the USDJPY has room for further gains, especially as the US dollar continues to strengthen broadly.
In China, the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) kept its policy rates unchanged today – as expected – although the officials are now committed to put in place ‘more proactive fiscal measures’ and ‘moderately loose’ monetary policy. For now, none of these legs have been enough to bring investors back on board. The Chinese CSI 300 is preparing to close the week on a meagre note.
In the euro area, we get data on consumer confidence for December. Consumer confidence has been on a rising trend the past two years but in November it unexpectedly declined. It will be very import for the growth outlook to see if the decline was just a blip or it continued in December as we expect private consumption to be the main growth driver in 2025.
From the US, November Private Consumption Expenditures (PCE) are due for release today, including the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation. The CPI measure released earlier pointed towards relatively steady inflation pressure in November.
In the US, we will also keep an eye on Congress, which will have to find a deal to avoid a government shutdown, after the House of Representatives voted down the latest version of a funding bill last night.
In the Nordics, we will look out for consumer and business sentiment in Sweden and Denmark.
We also get retail sales, wage data and PPI inflation in Sweden.
What happened overnight
Japanese November CPI inflation excl. fresh food increased to 2.7% from 2.3% in October. Core inflation increased to 1.7% from 1.6. The underlying price pressure has been stronger in H2 and largely aims with the 2% inflation target. The unwillingness from the BoJ to raise rates further stems from a worry that wage growth will fade in the spring leaving price pressures back where they have been for decades, close to zero. This has added further to downward pressures on the yen triggering verbal intervention from the Japanese finance minister and top currency diplomat.
What happened yesterday
The Riksbank cut the policy rate by 25bp to 2.5% as widely expected but the signals for the future were more hawkish as the Riksbank expects only one more cut during H1 2025. In the rate path, the implied probability is rather evenly distributed between the January and March meetings, but with the overall communication saying they will have “a more tentative approach” and “carefully evaluate the need for future interest rate adjustments” it seems more likely than not that the Riksbank is ready to pause in January, in our view. We therefore have adjusted our call and now expect 25bp cuts in March and June, resulting in an end point of 2.00% (previously 1.75%). At the press conference, Thedéen commented that current policy is likely somewhat stimulative and that once the policy rate reaches 2.25% by Q1 next year, the risks are actually balanced putting an equal probability between cuts and hikes from there. We firmly believe there are more downside risks to the Riksbank’s main scenario. We now expect two cuts in March and June to 2.0% (previously 1.75%), 19 December.
Also in Sweden, there are plenty of interesting data. We start off with retail sales data for November, and here we will hopefully see more signs of the long-awaited recovery for household consumption. We also get wage data for October and PPI data for November, where the latter will likely see a rise due to higher energy prices (all released at 8.00 CET). At 9.00 CET, we will get a new set of NIER confidence data, and here we also expect to see a continued improvement in sentiment among both households and manufacturing sector. As always, attention will also be on price expectations and hiring plans. NIER will also release new set of economic forecasts at 9.15 CET.
Norges Bank left policy rates unchanged in a decision widely expected by analysts and markets. Importantly the Norwegian central bank firmed its guidance towards a March 2025 rate cut – the first in the cycle – by presenting a rate path suggesting a close to 100% probability of a 25bp rate reduction conditioned on the central bank’s economic projections materialising. Norges Bank notably did not suggest that rates could be cut in January. Further out Norges Bank guided towards three cuts in 2025 although with an elevated risk of a fourth cut. We continue to pencil in the first cut in March alongside three additional rate cuts in 2025 and four cuts in 2026.
The Bank of England also agreed to keep rates unchanged as expected. The decision was taken with three board members voting for a cut, which was a surprise. That said, BoE continues to emphasise a gradual approach to reducing the restrictiveness of monetary policy. We think this supports our base case of the next cut coming in February and a quarterly pace after that.
FI: European curves steepened from the long end mirroring the US yields’ reaction to the FOMC meeting on Wednesday night. However, it was a gradual move through the day, thus it was with some delay that we saw the full effect. With the final central bank meetings of the year behind us, and only a few trading sessions left for the year, we expect a relative tight trading range in coming days, with focus on the supply announcements for next year. Yesterday, the French Tresór said that they plan to sell EUR300bn next year, which is unchanged from the October plan. BoE’s dovish tilt (6-3 split vote for unchanged) relative to market expectations sent UK yields somewhat lower on the day, we stay positive GBP.
FX: As expected, the Riksbank lowered the policy rate by 25bp to 2.50% and indicated only one more cut in H1. A hawkish cut which strengthened the SEK and supported our call for tactical downside in EUR/SEK. EUR/SEK dropped some ten figures towards the lower end of 11.40’s before erasing some of the losses in the Asian session. Meanwhile, NOK/SEK was down 1.5 figures to below 0.9650. Norges Bank did not rock the boat, but the NOK traded on the defensive as focus shifts to the looming easing cycle that will probably start in March. The selloff in EUR/USD paused in the European session but as US trading opened the cross dived below 1.04 again and is now back close to 1.0350. The relentless selling of the JPY has continued, and USD/JPY was on the verge to break above 158. This morning Japan FM Kato expressed concerns and talked about appropriate action if there are excessive moves. Sterling was lower after Bank of England’s dovish voting split to keep rates unchanged.
The EUR/GBP cross drifts higher to near 0.8300 during the early European session on Friday. The Pound Sterling (GBP) weakens after the downbeat UK Retail Sales data.
Data released by the Office for National Statistics on Friday showed that UK Retail Sales rose 0.2% MoM in November versus a 0.7% decline in October. This figure came in below the market consensus of a 0.5% increase. On an annual basis, Retail Sales climbed 0.5% in November, compared to a rise of 2.0% (revised from 2.4%) prior, missing the estimation of 0.8%. The GBP attracts some sellers in an immediate reaction to the downbeat UK Retail Sales and acts as a tailwind for the EUR/GBP cross.
On the Euro front, the European Central Bank (ECB) is likely to continue to lower its key interest rate next year. The ECB Governing Council member Gediminas Simkus said on Thursday that the central bank should keep lowering borrowing costs at the current pace as inflation is increasingly under control. ECB President Christine Lagarde said ECB policymakers would keep cutting interest rates if forthcoming inflation data aligns with anticipations.
The ECB will hold its first rate-setting meeting of 2025 on January 30. Investors envisage a slightly more aggressive path of the ECB easing cycle next year, which might weigh on the Euro against the GBP.
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