USDX
104.198

0.30%

XAUUSD
1823.96

0.67%

WTI
109.262

0.90%

EURUSD
1.04327

0.19%

GBPUSD
1.22520

0.08%

USDJPY
129.082

0.10%

USNDAQ100
12252.79

0.92%

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Turkey Witnesses Bitcoin Frenzy Amid Economic Turmoil

Cryptocurrency ownership is soaring in Turkey as high inflation and a weak lira prompt Turks to seek ways to preserve the value of their savings. Concerns rise about a fast-growing industry and legislation is overdue.

Skepticism About Sudanese Military's Calls for Dialogue

Analysts believe the recent call by Sudan's military leaders for a dialogue to overcome the ongoing political crisis will not lead to any results.

After Reopening, Thailand's Battered Tourism Struggles to Rebuild

Authorities hope 5 to 15 million visitors will visit the country this year, down from 40 million before the pandemic.

China's Economy Cools Down Significantly. Will the CNY Continue to Depreciate?

Under the impact of the pandemic, China's economy cooled down significantly in April, with downward pressure on the economy coming to the fore and the CNY exchange rate continuing to depreciate, but the economy is also expected to improve with the better conditions of the pandemic and policy stimul

PENDING

WTI: Several Indicators Are Driving Oil Prices Higher

TRADING

XAUUSD: Prices Could Enter Medium-Term Recovery Phase After Sharp Sell-Off

PENDING

GBPUSD: GBP Has Been Fluctuating Downward, Recommended to Buy Low and Sell High

TRADING

EURUSD: Here Comes EUR Weakness as It Falls Back after a Rise

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      The UK's Dovish Turn: The £ Gets Pounded

      Devin Wang
      Summary:

      The Bank of England's May meeting has stoked recession and stagflation risks, and a more measured approach to tightening.

      Recession Risks Loom Large

      Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation was previously expected to peak in the spring, but the Bank of England (BoE) signaled it is now expected to hit double digits in October, exacerbated by the Russia-Ukraine conflict. CPI is expected to rise further to a peak of slightly above 10%, on average, in Q4 2022. In a similar vein to the February projections, the BoE forecasts inflation to fall sharply to 2.1% in two years' time and to well below target at 1.3% in three years.
      A positive note sounded on getting inflation under control was dampened by gross domestic product (GDP) growth expectations. Bank staff forecasters have updated their projections and GDP is forecast to fall by nearly 1% in the final quarter of this year as energy price hikes bite, and to be broadly flat for 2023, raising prospects of a recession. Hiking rates into an impending growth slowdown is not a comfortable position for any central bank. In the press conference, Governor Andrew Bailey appeared to avoid the word “stagflation,” but it sure looks like that is the word for it.
      To put this in context, such a downturn will represent the second-biggest hit to living standards since 1964. Total real household disposable income is projected to fall by 1.75% in 2022, despite the support from the fiscal measures contained in the Spring Statement. This is a greater fall than in the February projection, and apart from in 2011, would be the largest contraction since records began. Meanwhile, it was reported that Prime Minister Boris Johnson was considering calling a snap election this year, after being warned that the economy will not improve before his term runs out.

       A Hawk-Dove Divide

      While rates were raised by 0.25%, to 1%, in the BoE's fourth consecutive hike, this was not unanimous as three members voted for a larger 0.5% increase. The meeting minutes noted significant disagreement among committee members. On the more hawkish side, three members favored the 0.5% hike, believing that capacity pressures would be greater than suggested by the projections. But on the more dovish side, two members thought that risks around activity and inflation were “evenly balanced,” and ergo preferred to remove the forward guidance that further rate hikes would be appropriate.
      The BoE is treading very carefully, but as it has highlighted, inflation could continue to surprise to the upside, in which case it may be forced to continue rate hikes even during a recession.

      Gilts Prices Up, Sterling Down

      Given the downbeat growth forecasts, the market trimmed expectations for future rate hikes, with more measured expectations around hikes of 0.25% at future meetings rather than the chance of 0.50% increments. Sterling fell sharply (Exhibit 1) to levels seen in July 2020, reflecting the downbeat growth outlook.
      The UK's Dovish Turn: The £ Gets Pounded_1
      We have highlighted previously that the market's continued extrapolation of future rate hikes was hard to deliver and that the BoE may well be forced to pause and ultimately undershoot expectations. The fact that BoE projections have inflation falling well below target suggests that the current market pricing (which is used to construct the forecasts and assumes that the bank rate rises to 2.5% by mid-2023) is too aggressive. Even now, the BoE has already delivered the fastest rate of policy tightening since 1999.

      A Dovish Turn?

      The BoE has kicked the can down the road on active gilt sales, with more details not expected until the end of the summer. The smaller program of corporate bond sales will begin in September. Even so, over the next four years, the balance sheet of gilts accumulated through quantitative easing will already begin to shrink on its own as assets mature, reducing the balance sheet by one-third. While estimates vary widely on the impact of such quantitative tightening (QT), this could further temper the path of rate hikes.
      A more measured hiking cycle indicates a potential normalization of yield curves in the UK, where the flatness of the yield curve at this point in the cycle has at times been at extreme levels, as discussed in a previous article. Indeed, post the BoE announcement, the 2s10s slope – the difference in basis points between the 2-year and 10-year gilt yields – steepened (Exhibit 2). We would caution against a re-steepening of the yield curve being viewed as a positive signal for the economy. Recession risk remains tangible for the UK, and the BoE's path to tighten financial conditions through policy and QT is one to watch, especially as a dovish turn can easily change direction.
      The UK's Dovish Turn: The £ Gets Pounded_2

      Source: Janus Henderson

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