Two Swallows don’t Make a Summer either.
Friday, November 6th, 2009So two central banks have led the way and raised interest rates (Australia and Norway), starting their journey on the long way back to interest-rate normality. But it does not necessarily follow that just because two commodity-linked countries have started to hike rates, the Fed, BoE and the ECB are about to follow suit anytime soon. Speculation that the Fed and BoE are contemplating rate hikes is way too premature – the order of events will surely be for Quantitative Easing spending to be halted first and only then will the central bankers turn to taking back some of the rate cuts they have implemented since the summer of 2007.
The US has recently reported GDP turning positive in the third quarter of this year but the US economy is still far too weak for the Fed to risk halting QE anytime soon, let alone even think about raising interest rates from their current floor of 0.25%. One positive quarter of GDP is just the start of a potential recovery (which could easily fizzle out again next year) and the Fed made it clear in their Fomc statement earlier this week that rates are staying put “for an extended period” and the Fed won’t even finish spending its current $1.75 trillion QE money until the end of March 2010. As was announced today, US unemployment is still rising and has now reached 10.2%.
Similarly the Bank of England this week increased by £25 bln its QE target to £200 bln, to be fully spent by the end of January 2010. The BoE will most likely decide to print even more money if GDP does not return to growth in Q4 (after the surprise of the UK posting another quarter of recession in Q3). As the BoE will not raise rates ahead of next year’s General Election, theoretically the ECB is in line to be the first of the major Western central banks to implement a rate hike as they never embarked upon QE in the first place. However the jury is out on whether the ECB will raise rates with Spanish unemployment of almost 20% and with Ireland looking set to go to the IMF to seek a loan.
Inflationary pressures will not be seen in the UK until a lot more of the £200 bln QE money finds its way off deposit at the BoE (where £151 bln currently sits) and out into the wider economy where it can begin to chase the price of goods & services higher. Therefore the BoE will only come under pressure to raise rates in the near term if the Pound Sterling collapses.
So the sight of central banks raising rates looks to be spotted for the time being only in the economies of the world which export commodities. China will probably be the first Asian central bank to increase rates because the Yuan is closely tied to the US Dollar and other Asian countries do not want to raise rates and cause their currencies to appreciate against the Dollar or the Yuan.