Monday, October 6, 2008

Market Commentary The UK

The pound sank as well under the weight of the credit crunch, housing problems and slowing economy. But it fared better than the euro.

The Bank of England’s measure of mortgage approvals fell to a new record low of 32,000 in August from 33,000 in July, and this is 75 percent below their peak. The crisis continues, as expected.


Not exactly unexpectedly, the net balance of lenders reporting a decline in the availability of secured credit to households was 39 percent in the three months to September. This was slightly better than the 47 percent fall reported in the three months to June.


Also, the Nationwide House prices contracted 1.7 percent in Septemberon top of -1.9 percent in August. On a yearly basis they fell 12.4 percent from -10.5 percent.

The current account deficit widened to 11 billion pounds, the largest in three quarters.

The manufacturing PMI fell to 41 in September from 45.3 the previous month, the lowest since the report began in January 1992, services PMI contacted to 46 in September, the lowest since the gauge began in 1996, from 49.2 in August, and the PMI construction fell to 38.8 in September from 40.5 in August.

The gross domestic product was unrevised at flat in the second quarter but was revised upward to 1.5 percent on a yearly basis from the previous estimate of 1.4 percent. In addition, services grew 0.2 percent from the first quarter, the weakest pace since 1995.

To make a long story short, the UK is probably already in its first recession since 1991, so the BoE must cut interest rates.

No comments: