“Shock and horror” this week as UK CPI inflation breeched the Bank of England’s target rate of 2% pa, a target that the bank has hardly ever met over the past couple of decades, whilst across “the pond” the financial media talking heads are seeing the current 2.7% annualised rate for US CPI as a […]
Impeachment…..Is defined as a charge of misconduct made against the holder of a public office and they do not get any higher in the United States of America than the office of The President. The airwaves and financial talk-shops are abuzz today following the allegation that President “the Donald” Trump asked the former FBI Director […]
When Harold Wilson commenced his first stint as the British Labour Party Prime Minister in 1964, he inherited an unusually large external deficit on the balance of trade from the Conservative administration and despite fighting the markets for a couple of years, the inevitable devaluation of the £GBP came in 1967, when Wilson famously assured […]
“793”…… Global merger and acquisition (M&A) deals have been completed this year as of the end of April 2017, according to “dialogic” who collates the data involving publicly traded corporations. This is 20% lower than the comparable period of 2016 and is the lowest number since 1998, which given that stock and bond markets are […]
French voters face a stark choice in Sunday’s presidential election between joining the wave of populism that has swept across the European and American political landscape over the past year or an attempt to renew the governing principles that have guided their country for decades, albeit via a 39-year-former untested Socialist turned Centrist. With the […]
“3% annualised GDP”…… Is the expectation/hope/dream set out by the new US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin this week, as he and his fellow ex-Goldman Sachs colleague and now White House chief economic advisor Gary Cohn, set out “the biggest tax reform in American history.” Tax cuts, set to slash corporate rates from 35% to […]
“7th May 2020”…… was to be the date of the UK’s next General Election, in line with the fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011. However, the British Prime Minister, Teresa May, called for an 8th June 2017 snap election this week and was backed by the two-thirds majority required from the 650 MPs in the House of […]
Just nine months after British Prime Minister David Cameron resigned, following his failed “gamble” on calling a referendum on EU membership, his successor Teresa May announced a snap election decision this week, to be held on the 8th June 2017, mercifully only 7 short-weeks from today and despite her denying any plans for an early […]
“Liquidity”…… is defined as a measure or extent to which a person or organisation has cash to meet immediate and short-term obligations, or assets that can be quickly converted to cash to do this. Put another way, it’s the life-blood of the markets without which they cease-up. There are numerous clues to assist in […]
In the late February overview, “¥en, a Desire to Watch Closely,” the message was “if ever there is a time to keep a very close eye on the ¥en, or more importantly the $US/¥ cross-rate, it’s now.” At the time the cross rate was 112.5 with four charts outlining the close correlation of the $US/¥ […]
“Rock On”…… is a song written by British singer/songwriter David Essex and recorded in 1973 shortly before a UK referendum took the nation into the European Union. In the week when “Article 50,” the process by which member states may withdraw from the EU, was triggered by the British Prime Minister, “Rock,” hit the news […]
“Shock and horror” this week as UK CPI inflation breeched the Bank of England’s target rate of 2% pa, a target that the bank has hardly ever met over the past couple of decades, whilst across “the pond” the financial media talking heads are seeing the current 2.7% annualised rate for US CPI as a major reason for the FOMC’s “guidance” towards three rate increases this year.
It all sounds so logical doesn’t it? The Bank of England blames the Brexit effect on the £Sterling and the price of Oil, which of course is dollar-priced, whist Auntie Janet at the Fed deludes herself and anyone else who cares to listen that it’s down to a strengthening US economy, despite the fact that US GDP has been trending lower for over two-years now, despite the efforts of the Fed to inflate it.
The first of two charts shows UK CPI inflation annualised since 2001, with the Oil price overlaid in red and the £/$US exchange rate as the black dashed-line. The £/$ rate has been used as the Sterling index on the Bloomberg system has a relatively short history and either way it is closely correlated with the £/$ rate:
Whilst the Oil price did have a decent correlation with UK CPI until 2012, it’s broken down since then so sorry Mr Carney but that excuse doesn’t stack up now. As for the weaker £Sterling, the history shows the “opposite,” strong £ = higher CPI or vice-versa, until the current nil-correlation that is!
The second chart, just for a bit of fun, compares 110-years of US CPI inflation, as a percentage return, against the Dow Jones Industrial Average, or Dow, the most watched stock-index in the world:
It was intended to show a 100-year chart but that would have omitted most of World-War 1 and as you can see, wars are inflationary. But again either way, drum roll:
110-year return for US CPI = 168% V 110-year return for the Dow = 25,735%
Wow! Who would have thought it, but there it is. However, they say that context is everything and that’s the great thing with long-term charts.
Kindly note that the Dow effectively flat-lined, until the 1970s that is, a fact that this commentator has barked on about on numerous occasions and will again next week when the subject is revisited.
In the meantime, there appears to be an element of surprise in respect of yesterday’s market swoon. As such you may wish to read or re-read our “Yen, A Desire to Watch Closely,” article of late February, which explained the importance of watching the $US/¥ cross-rate and its implication for various asst classes whilst “Countdown to the showdown” of early March discussed the post Trump election rally for differing assets before warning of an approaching period of important dates, including the 21st March.
So there we have it, the warnings have been there to see…and FREE of charge come to that, for those who aren’t bewitched with the media talking-heads or the “smoke and mirrors” from the central banks.
Oh, you may also wish to take a look at last year’s “The Madness of Crowds” knowledge share, which would have removed any surprise from the impending bond yield surge.