Market Update 5th August 2022
This week the Bank of England forecast a recession in Q4
2022. Consumer price inflation, driven principally by
price rises in energy, food, and physical goods hit 9.4%
in June. The Bank now forecasts inflation to continue to
rise in the coming months, peaking at 13.3% in Q4 2022.
This is a significant increase compared to the
Bank’s previous prediction of 10%, and we should not
assume that 13.3% is the worst that inflation could peak
to this year.
It was only January when the bank
was predicting inflation of more than 6% and saying
gradual interest rate rises would be able tame it and the
UK could sidestep a recession. Back then Governor Andrew
Bailey was talking about the squeeze on the cost of living
to providing a way of easing inflationary pressures.
If
the bank’s prediction is right and inflation tops
13% this year, we’re likely to experience a
recession that could last to the end of 2023. However, it
is the forecast of an average real terms drop in income of
5% which should be alarming for the next prospective
residents of numbers 10 and 11 Downing Street because
nothing gets a politician voted out of office quite like a
sharp fall in the standard of living in their electorate.
At the last election Boris Johnson campaigned on the
promise of ‘levelling up’ but the economy has been badly
hit by the combination of locking down the economy for
much of 2020 and 2021, and now the impact of the war in
Ukraine that has caused a surge in energy and other
commodity prices.
GLOBAL: RECORD OIL COMPANY PROFITS AS OPEC TWEAKS
PRODUCTION TARGET
BP is the latest energy company to announce bumper profits
as it reaped the benefit of high oil and gas prices. BP’s
underlying profits for Q2 jumped to $8.5bn, more than
three times its profits for the same quarter in 2021. Last
week Shell reported record profits of $11.5bn. This comes
in the same week as warnings that UK energy bills are set
to rise higher than expected and remain high for longer
with Cornwall Insight predicting average domestic energy
bills will remain above £3,000 a year until 2024.
The
Bank of England also warned that high energy costs are
eroding living standards. The latest meeting of the OPEC+
cartel of oil producing countries announced a slight
increase in its production target as it remains under
intense pressure to pump more oil to dampen down prices.
The group agreed to increase planned production by 100,000
barrels a day, or 0.1% of total production. The price of
oil has fallen more than 6% this week as some data points
to a drop in consumer demand, but the consensus view is
that oil is the commodity that nations cannot do without
and with production only being upped by an almost
irrelevant 100,000 barrels per day, the price of Brent
Crude will probably head back above US$100 per barrel.
UK: BANK OF ENGLAND HIKES RATES TO 1.75%
The Bank of England raised rates by a further 0.5% as it
warned it expects inflation to keep rising. The interest
rate hike was in line with expectations after Governor
Bailey commented on the prospect. However, the upgrade to
inflation forecasts was accompanied by a warning of
imminent recession which sent the yield on 10-year gilts
down sharply as investors looked to safety of government
bonds amid the pending slowdown. The bank expects
inflation to exceed 13% by the end of the year, driven by
the latest increase in natural gas, and to remain high
next year before returning to its 2% target in 2024. If
you want to secure your assets now, find out how we can
help with
wealth management.
The squeeze on living standards is expected
to contribute to a recession which the bank predicts will
begin in Q4 this year and last throughout 2023. The latest
PMI figures show that services and manufacturing output is
already dropping sharply. The prime ministerial candidates
tried to use the decision to boost their campaigns with
Liz Truss promising to overhaul to Bank’s inflation target
while Rishi Sunak has suggested that more government
borrowing would simply lead to more interest rate rises,
possibly peaking at around 7%.
CHINA: MARKETS NERVOUS AS TENSIONS OVER TAIWAN
RISE
There was more volatility in Chinese equity markets this
week as tensions over Taiwan’s status intensified
following US House of Representatives speaker Nancy
Pelosi’s visit. After its attempts to prevent Pelosi’s
visit didn’t work, China launched a huge demonstration of
its military and naval capability in an attempt to assert
authority over its neighbour. The Shanghai Composite Index
dropped 3% at the start of the week as political tensions
rose.
The economic struggle between the US and
China continues in other areas too. Alibaba recently
became the latest company to be put on notice of
de-listing in the US if it fails to meet US audit
regulations. Alibaba joins Yum China, Baidu and Weibo on
the long list of companies under threat of removal. Joe
Biden has also recently signed the CHIPS and Science Act
which promises investment of up to $52bn and to provide
tax breaks of up to $25bn to encourage microchip research
and manufacture in the US. Among the rules for qualifying
for the benefits is a ban on significant investment in
foreign countries including China.
Please note that nothing written here by the author should be construed as giving advice, it merely outlines our thinking. Any advice will be discussed and proposed on an individual basis with each client when any advice that is given should be fully discussed with us before proceeding with any proposals made.
If you enjoy reading this weekly update, please feel
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also find the contents of interest, and do not hesitate to
contact us if you need any help, information or advice
yourself about any of the areas covered this week.
Yours sincerely,
Philip A. Simmonds MBA, LL.B(Hons), FPFS, Chartered MCSI
Chartered Wealth Manager | Chartered Financial Planner
Solicitor (company in-house solicitor)
Chief Investment Officer | Head of Strategy
E : phil.simmonds@private-office.co.uk
phil.simmonds@private-office.law (for legal matters)