Aug 16 2007
More troubles on the markets
It was not surprising to see a further fall as markets reflected on the absence of good information on how big the losses have been so far on difficult loans, and who has incurred them.
The Central Banks??must have realised markets would fall further whilst all the uncertainties about future interest rate levels and banking losses ??remained. Their silence on cutting interest rates is deafening. The markets yesterday??moved in the direction of thinking ??the Bank of England would not increase interest rates again. Sterling fell, and future interest rate pricing adjusted accordingly. The Bank’s monthly cycle of meeting and reporting looks very slow moving now. The Bank’s official position does not rule out a further increase in rates.
The ECB last left markets expecting a further rise in their rates. If and when they change this position it will seem to imply they have given in to French pressure to keep interest rates down. It would also be a sensible response to the slowing of the Italian and French economies and to the movements in the markets.
As readers of this blog will know, I have never thought simply supplying liquidity to the markets solves the problem. It eases daily pressures,and can sometimes fuel rallies in prices, but it does not tackle the underlying reality that banks and investors have lost money and are unsure how big an impact this will have on balance sheets and willingness to enter future transactions.
Confidence can only be rebuilt when we know the magnitude of the impact of the losses and when investors believe Central Banks have shifted from fighting the last war - against inflation - to fighting the next war - against lack of confidence.
John Redwood has been the Member of Parliament for Wokingham since 1987. First attending Kent College, Canterbury, he graduated from Magdalen College...
How far can ‘confidence’ go towards building unsustainable speculative bubbles?
reply: If there is confidence a bubble is not a bubble, it is just high spirits.
Inflation is going to become a major factor in the UK economy due to Gordon Brown’s debt fuelled growth. The massive volumes of debt in the UK are carrying interest, which is a demand for more money than already exists. This creates an inflationary pressure. Currently the strength of the pound is bailing out Gordon Brown. However once sterling takes a sustained dive expect to see inflation take off. The problem with debt driven inflation is that raising interest rates will not bring inflation in check because increasing interest will increase the debt and will create a furthe demand for money that doesn’t already exist.