Browsing Posts tagged Bank of England

U.K. house prices unexpectedly jumped in May by the most since 2002, adding to signs the worst of the recession is over, a report by Halifax showed.

Home values rose 2.6 percent from the previous month to an average of £158,565 pounds ($260,000), the division of Lloyds Banking Group Plc said in a statement in London today. Economists predicted a 1 percent drop, according to the median of 12 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. From a year earlier, prices fell 13.7 percent.

Services industries expanded for the first time in a year in May and consumer confidence rose to a six-month high, reports yesterday showed, in further evidence the economy is emerging from its slump. The Bank of England said today it will continue spending 125 billion pounds in newly printed money to bolster lending as it kept the benchmark interest rate at a record low.

“The Halifax data are bound to heighten speculation that the housing market is turning,” said Howard Archer, chief European economist at IHS Global Insight in London. “We believe that the pickup in actual house purchases is likely to be gradual and fitful for some time to come given ongoing tight credit conditions.”

The monthly increase was the first in four months, Halifax said. In the three months through May, prices fell 16.3 percent from a year earlier.

“There are some tentative indications of a possible stabilization in activity, albeit at a low level,” Nitesh Patel, an economist at Halifax, said in the statement. “House sales remain substantially below their long term average and market conditions are expected to remain difficult.”

The Bank of England today left the benchmark interest rate at 0.5 percent at its monthly decision and said they would keep the total amount of money that they want to spend on assets to aid the economy under review.

Economic Recovery in the UK beggining the end of this year?

According to a recent article in the Financial Times the UK economy should begin to recover by the end of this year. The huge monetary and fiscal provisions, combined with sharp falls in commodity prices, will help boost household and business spending, a senior Bank of England official predicted.

Spencer Dale, chief economist at the Bank and a member of its rate-setting monetary policy committee, made the remarks at a meeting of the Association of British Insurers, a group whose members have been hit by the sharp fall in stock markets and the crunch in credit markets.

“As we go through 2009, I believe it is most likely that the pace at which output is contracting will ease and that we will see some signs of recovery by around the turn of this year,” Mr Dale told the group.

He went on to say that the causes of the current recession were different from previous recessions and that its actual path was not known. “There is huge uncertainty about the precise form and timing of the recovery and so this central path should be treated with a healthy degree of scepticism.”

Mr Dale said the Bank would keep in place its unconventional exercise of monetary policy (known as quantitative easing) until it became apparent that it had succeeded in bringing inflation back to its annual 2 per cent medium-term target.

The Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee today voted to reduce the official Bank Rate paid on commercial bank reserves by 0.5 percentage points to 1.0%.

The Committee’s latest inflation and output projections will appear in the Inflation Report to be published on Wednesday 11 February.

The minutes of the meeting will be published at 9.30am on Wednesday 18 February.

The previous change in Bank Rate was a reduction of 0.5 percentage points to 1.5% on 8 January 2009.

Read the full report: http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/publications/news/2009/008.htm

Currency Update

If you think Sterling has had a tough time in the last couple of months look what happened in 1992.  Do the words "black Wednesday" ring any bells?  On 16 September of that year Britain’s Conservative government abandoned its attempt to keep Sterling in the European Union’s Exchange Rate Mechanism.  In the space of three months the Pound fell from $2 to $1.50.  What we are seeing at the moment is nothing like as bad as that, though it’s bad enough if you’re paid in Sterling.

They were worried about inflation back in the late eighties and early nineties; that is why Britain tried to attach itself to the low-inflation German Mark even at the cost of high interest rates and recession.  They (and that means every government and central bank in the world) are worried about it now, for different reasons.  Higher interest rates won’t bring down the price of oil.  Even less will they bring food prices under control.

They do however make people think, especially if they need to borrow money to do things:  Do I need that business meeting in the Far East?  That 17mpg Chelsea tractor?  More to the point, central banks normally have only one tool at their disposal to keep inflation on target: interest rates.  But they are not stupid.  Oil is not going to $300 a barrel because demand would quickly dry up.   UK house prices will carry on down because they went up too far and to fast.  Lower interest rates will make only marginal difference to either situation.

If this all sounds defeatist and pessimistic, bear in mind it is exactly the message we are hearing from the Bank of England.  As ever, there’s good news and bad news:  Inflation will peak before too long and Britain will – technically at least – go into economic recession.

So what will this mean for Sterling against the Dollar?

There, sadly, it looks at the moment like bad news and bad news.  After seven years of decline the Dollar was overdue for a break and at last it’s got one.  Having plunged to 2 per cent earlier this year US interest rates will not – barring economic disasters – go any lower.  The question is when they will go up.  UK rates ticked down to 5 per cent in April and – barring inflation disasters – they are not going up.  The question is how long it will be before they go down.  The alternatives for currency investors are clear: Get aboard the Dollar as it extends its recovery or stick with the Pound on its way down.

These things are never as cut and dried as they appear.  It would be no surprise to see a correction to the Dollar’s recent run of good fortune but that would not necessarily change the fundamental view.  If the US economy really has turned the corner, as  suggested by the consumer sentiment surveys, and if the UK economy really is heading for hell in the Old Lady’s hypothetical hand-basket, the Pound has further to fall against the Dollar.

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The Council of Mortgage Lenders chairman has urged the Bank of England to lead a global action plan to alleviate turmoil in the financial markets.
He called on BoE governor Mervyn King to coordinate action between international central banks such as the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve.
The Council of Mortgage Lenders’ members are banks, building societies and other lenders who together undertake around 98% of all residential mortgage lending in the UK. There are 11.8 million mortgages in the UK, with loans worth over £1.2 trillion.
 
Read the full speech below…
 
"Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. What a difference a year makes.
 
"This time last year my predecessor, Jon Pain, then managing director of Cheltenham & Gloucester, took the opportunity at this lunch to celebrate the CML’s 18th birthday and the successful, vibrant, innovative and competitive mortgage market in the UK – the envy of the world.
 
"Many of those attributes still apply equally today, although it may not feel like it at the moment as we steer our businesses through the storms of the liquidity crisis and credit crunch – global events largely outside our direct control.
 
"Last year, we were all looking ahead to the potential market impacts of – the rollout of Home Information Packs, a new Prime Minister committed to growth in home ownership, and worsening affordability pressures with interest rates trending up to 5.75% and higher.
 
"HIPs became something of a side show.
 
"The Prime Minister has shown himself keen to promote shared equity for key workers this week, but a few thousand subsidised transactions makes the new scheme an inaccessible irrelevance to most first time buyers.
 
"And this week interest rates were reduced to 5%, and I expect further reductions over the coming months as the credit crunch contagion starts to affect the economy more widely.
 
"So – and stating the obvious, here – we have a very different market picture than we expected this time last year.
 
"Jon Pain went on to say with remarkable prescience that ‘the holy grail’ is perhaps to create a deeper and more liquid European funding market from which UK lenders, and their customers, can ultimately benefit.
 
"Access to European Central Bank funds in recent months has certainly helped some UK based lenders. The challenge is for a similar facility to be more widely available in the UK via the Bank of England – sooner rather than later.
 
"The bit that I defy anyone to claim that they saw coming this time last year has been the corrosive effect of the contagion from the global credit crunch and the shattering consequences of the bank run in the UK last summer.
 
"Like you, I’ve been reading the daily outpouring of product re-pricing, product withdrawals, and announcements of redundancies and business closures.
 
"And I have a sense of shock at how deeply our successful industry has already been hit by these unprecedented funding market conditions.
 
"But I’m also impressed by lenders’ speed of response and determination to continue to deliver mortgages to as many borrowers as possible – the vast majority who want one – within the constraints on our collective access to funds.
 
"We also continue to focus closely on managing the difficulties for those existing borrowers who may find themselves stretched in this new world order.
 
"Let me remind you of the CML’s forecasts from last October to put the current situation in context. Then our view was that, year on year, there would be a slow down of around 15% in terms of net lending, with consumer demand underpinning net lending of around £90bn this year, down from £108 billion in 2007.
 
"However, in the last few months, we have also highlighted the funding gap between supply and this expected demand, as the mortgage market remains predominantly funded by retail savings since last summer.
 
"Today, the picture is one of slightly lower demand for mortgages since our forecast. But potential borrowing still significantly exceeds the industry’s collective capacity to supply funds. It is therefore a real possibility, looking forward from today, that net lending in 2008 could reach only half las
t year’s level unless additional funds become available. But it doesn’t have to be that way. More of that later.
 
"Sometimes, lenders are criticised for being too conservative and risk averse, unwilling to lend against perfectly good propositions. Other times we stand accused of being reckless, enticing poor credit risks into unsustainable borrowing.
 
"Some of you will have heard me say at our annual conference in December that I thought the first half of my year in office would be spent defending the industry against accusations of lending to the wrong people and the second half against accusations of not lending to enough people. I was of course completely wrong. It was actually during February that the industry was accused of doing both and simultaneously.
 
"I think we need to address one key issue today. What interventions by the tripartite authorities, in collaboration with the mortgage industry, could help rather than hinder the market?
 
"Some of you – I think perhaps a diminishing minority – might still argue that the Bank of England should not intervene in a market adapting to a new operating environment.
 
"We all know the moral hazard argument. We should not be bailed out or subsidised. If risks have not been properly priced in the past, an adjustment needs to be made.
 
"All true at an individual firm level, but collectively these arguments fail to take account of the risk of contagion for the economy from substantially lower business levels, particularly impacting on housing transactions and first-time buyers.
 
"I suggest there are several steps needed on the part of the Bank. It needs to realise that the underlying problem may not be the one it thinks it is. Compared to the actions of the Federal Reserve in the US, our central bank stands accused of having been cautious and slow.
 
"The bank has diagnosed the overhang of assets as the disease. We see it as a symptom.
 
"It believes that institutions are hoarding liquidity because they do not trust other banks and so are reluctant to lend to each other. We think that lenders are hoarding liquidity because they’re concerned about whether they will be able to access future funding and are managing pipelines of business very cautiously.
 
"They’re worried less about the here and now and credit risk in the UK mortgage market, than the uncertainty about whether they’ll be able to get funds when they need to refinance their own maturing debt commitments and new mortgage offers they are seeking to make.
 
"If our diagnosis is right, then deeper and longer term repo facilities – extending beyond the three-month facility to 12 months or perhaps even 24 months – would definitely begin to help to address lenders’ concerns.
 
"And kick-starting the market for new issuance of mortgage-backed securities – perhaps by incentivising the kind of stable, domestic investors such as pension funds that would fit this market well – is something that the CML believes the Bank should seriously consider.
 
"If we await the return of global investors without taking action to reinforce why our market is different to the United States, we must accept that our new business levels will shrink substantially and for a significant period of time.
 
"As we have said this week, without attracting new funding sources, we will see an ongoing process of attrition in mortgage choice, possibly over a protracted period, with lenders managing down demand by tightening lending criteria, increasing price, or withdrawing more products from the market altogether. This is not lender specific but across the piece – large and small; specialist and mainstream; Plc and mutual.
 
"So today my message to Mervyn King is this. We urge you, governor, to show leadership in the proactive coordination of central bank responses globally to the current systemic risks. And in the UK, deliver on your recent hints to the Treasury Select Committee that you would be prepared to be more flexible. The main short term palliative is in the hands of the Bank of England, and there is a real and immediate need for broader based action than we have seen to date.
 
"To the chancellor, this message. We welcome your appointment of Sir James Crosby to lead a group including the CML and lenders to address funding problems, including the mortgage backed securities market. In terms of timescale, recommendations by the time of the Pre-Budget Report would simply not address the urgency of market difficulties now, nor reverse the shrinkage of the market I referred to earlier.
 
"But I very much hope that the interim report in the Summer will point us in the right direction so we can take early steps to address the market dysfunction.
 
"As the CML has said many times, it would be good for the Government to continue to remind people that the UK mortgage industry has been and remains a
major asset to UK plc and our economy.
 
"This will certainly be a central message when the CML meets government ministers shortly.
 
"We welcome contact with the government to discuss the position our existing customers – their voters – find themselves in We remain concerned that we still see two big problems – the inadequate state support scheme for mortgage borrowers and the absence of the regulation of sale and leaseback companies.
 
"Underpinning those borrowers in serious and short term financial difficulty to help minimise the level of repossessions is a clear spend to save policy.
 
"Yes, it has a short term cost in the form of higher benefit payments, but it delivers tangible longer term returns from helping people get back on their feet, supporting communities, and avoiding the likely higher costs of re-housing and housing benefit support.
 
"We look forward to continuing the close dialogue we have had with government ministers and officials.
And no CML speech would be complete without a plea to the Financial Services Authority.
 
"Please regulate us in a proportionate and focussed way – and we do appreciate that this is difficult in the environment flowing from the supervisory failures of Northern Rock.
 
"Lenders are engaging with the move towards more principles-based regulation and the treating customers fairly agenda. But, we do on occasion feel frustrated that FSA communications seem more alarming than reassuring in tone, failing in what is today the crucial role of helping market confidence.
 
"With the FSA hugely concerned with monitoring individual institutions’ liquidity on a regular basis, and driven by meeting its business plan commitments, there seems to be little “flex” in the regulator’s approach.
 
"For many organisations, but perhaps especially for small firms, this means that the regulatory burden is extremely high – some might say excessively so, relative to the consumer benefits.
 
"To lenders and intermediaries, my message is even simpler. We must make the very best of what we have.
 
"And what we have is not insignificant. For example – £2.5trillion of equity in the owner-occupied housing stock, against £1trillion of mortgage debt outstanding.
 
"The ability on the part of many lenders to raise substantial retail deposits is a real ongoing benefit when other funding sources remain constrained.
 
"The size and resilience of the full-service banking institutions with diversified businesses is also a source of strength for the mortgage market.
 
"High quality professionals who can not only sell mortgages but also provide a genuine service to borrowers facing less choice and higher costs, and who may need a more holistic financial planning approach as a result, will really add value in current market conditions.
 
"So let’s use everything we’ve got to make sure that the market adjustment to the new “normal” environment is as painless as possible.
 
"Finally, and most importantly, a message to mortgage borrowers – our customers.
We want to continue to provide you with the best mortgage market in Europe.
 
"We want to give you the excellent choice of good value products you’ve become used to. We want to give you good service and fair treatment both at the point of sale and during your ongoing relationship with us.
 
"And we don’t want you to be prevented from entering the market on good terms just because you don’t have a huge deposit.
 
"If you’re already in the market, perhaps with blemished credit, we don’t want to diminish your opportunity to rehabilitate your finances.
 
"It’s for all these reasons and more that we need the tripartite authorities to help us sustain the successful, vibrant, innovative and competitive mortgage market which we have developed since the recession in the early 1990s.
 
"We still have much more choice than we ever had before deregulation and the entry of specialist lenders into the market.
 
"We still have many consumers wanting to become home owners, given the opportunity.
 
"So let us continue to demonstrate to those who would criticise us that we are working for our customers, our industry, and the economy more generally through thick and thin, in good times and bad.
 
"On behalf of the CML Executive Committee and the staff, we thank you for your support to the CML, and invite your feedback and market intelligence.
 
"Despite my cautionary words, I hope you are enjoying your lunch, your conversations with your fellow guests, and your own chance to put the mortgage world to rights. Thank you."

The Bank of England cut the Bank Rate a quarter percent today – now down to 5%.

There are a considerable number of British investors and 2nd home buyers in Florida property that are thankful of the move.

British Mortgages Abroad’s ‘flexible tracker’ products and multi currency mortgages originated in UK pounds, track the BoE for their variable Interest rates.

Abbey chief economist Barry Naisbitt says:"The MPC has taken a forward-looking view that slower growth is likely to reduce medium-term inflationary pressures and has been able to cut rates because of its focus on medium-term inflation…

An article by Edmund Conway of the Telegraph (www.telegraph.co.uk) today reports the pound has broken through the $2 mark for the first time since January, after the Bank of England voted to leave interest rates unchanged at 5.25 percent yesterday.

It is the highest the pound has been since New Year’s Eve, but while it is good news for the British consumers now streaming over to the US for shopping trips, it will cause further concern among British manufacturers.

Experts said all eyes would be on the Bank’s minutes, released in a fortnight’s time. They will indicate how soon it will be before the Bank cuts borrowing rates again.

The Bank of England board meets the first Thursday of every month, sets interest rates to keep inflation low, issues bank notes and works to maintain a stable financial system. (www.bankofengland.co.uk)

Since the Bank’s Inflation Report last month, in which it hinted at further reductions in borrowing costs, the prospects for UK economic growth have remained more or less unchanged.

Futures markets indicate a 45 percent chance of a rate cut at the meeting on April 10.

British Retail Consortium director general Stephen Robertson said: "The Bank needs to take action sooner rather than later to ensure that the slowdown doesn’t risk turning into something more serious."

Relief all around as the Monetary Policy Committee held the base rate at 5.5%. However this relief is still short lived, the UK is still suffering from high levels of inflation, which are way off Target 2.0 levels, the UK still has a runaway housing market which, although is suffering in the wake of the HIP’s chaos is still going up. So this relief is most likely temporary and it is expected that there may be a further couple of rate rises before the end of the year.

This is good news for Florida property if you are considering a sterling mortgage. Which is still very attractive with the exchange rate as it is! Our range of Sterling Mortgages from BMA track the Bank of England base rate. There are currently three fixed rate products available from BMA so now really is the time to get one to future proof your mortgage against the possible rate rises on the horizon. Contact Us today.


None of the information contained in this blog/blog post constitutes, nor should be construed as Financial Advice.