Wednesday 22 January 2014

UK unemployment rate falls to 7.1%

Jobless rate falls to within whisker of Bank of England's forward guidance threshold for considering interest rate rise
The Bank of England sent a clear message that it has no immediate plans to raise interest rates, despite a shock fall in the unemployment rate close to the level at which the Bank said it would consider a hike.
Policymakers sought to ease fears of a rise after Britain's jobless rate fell sharply to 7.1% in the three months to November from 7.4%. It was a far bigger drop than economists were expecting, with most forecasting a modest fall to 7.3%.
Ian McCafferty, a member of the Bank's rate setting Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), said that although economic recovery was underway and unemployment was falling, inflation was back at the Bank's 2% target, easing the pressure to raise rates.
"It is therefore worth restating that the 7% unemployment level is only a threshold, not a trigger, and that the MPC sees no immediate need to increase interest rates even if 7% were to be hit in the near future," he said in a speech in Nottingham on Wednesday evening.
His comments reiterated those in the minutes of the MPC's January policy meeting, which showed there would be no rush to raise rates. The committee said that when the time did come to raise rates, it would do so "only gradually".
It suggested it would not raise rates until the Bank it had seen a pick up in wages growth and a more established recovery. Economists including those at the EY Item Club are not expecting a hike before mid 2015. Interest rates have been at an all-time low of 0.5% since March 2009.
"By then, we expect the recovery to have broadened out into exports and investment and real wages should be growing again. The consumer needs that time to get its breath back following all the heavy lifting undertaken in recent quarters," said Andrew Goodwin, senior economic adviser to the Item Club.
When the Bank's governor Mark Carney announced the introduction of so-called "forward guidance" on rates last summer, he was not expecting the jobless rate to fall to 7% until 2016. The Bank has since updated its view, but its most recent forecast suggested the rate would not be reached until the second half of 2015. In reality it now looks possible it will fall to that level next month.
Economists said the Bank's next move would most likely be to announce a change to its forward guidance policy when it next updates its forecasts in the February inflation report, possibly by lowering the threshold to 6.5% unemployment and introducing a supplementary wage rise measure.
"Overall we gain the impression that the MPC does not want to raise rates soon and that (perhaps) it will bring its unemployment threshold down, possibly next month," said Philip Shaw, economist at Investec.
The total number of people out of work in Britain fell by 167,000 to 2.32 million in the three months to November according to the Office for National Statistics data.
The number of people claiming jobless benefits in the UK also fell by 24,000 to a near five-year low of 1.25 million in December.
The employment minister, Esther McVey, said: "It's clear that the government's long-term economic plan to get people off benefits and into work so they can secure their future is proving successful."
Employment meanwhile jumped by 280,000 to 30.15 million – the biggest quarterly rise since records began in 1971 – driven mainly by a rise in people with full-time work.
Commenting on the increase, David Cameron said: "More jobs means more security, peace of mind and opportunity for the British people."
Despite the rise in employment, wage growth was flat at 0.9% between September and November, less than half the current 2% rate of inflation. People in the UK earned £447 a week on average in November, before tax and excluding bonuses. People worked an average 32.2 hour week over the three months, compared with 31.1hours in the previous quarter.
MPC members said the slow pace of wage growth in the UK appeared to reflect weak growth in productivity, the January minutes showed.
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FTSE retreats from eight-month highs, rates in focus

FTSE retreated from 8-month highs on Wednesday, with strong jobs data raising the spectre of interest rate hikes, and with analysts highlighting concerns about companies' weak earnings and high valuations.

Data showed the unemployment rate dropped to 7.1 percent in the three months to November, below even the most optimistic analyst forecast and just a decimal point above the threshold where the Bank of England has said it may think about raising interest rates.
Although the strength in job creation is good news for British business, the prospect of higher rates is not, as it will increase borrowing costs for companies and consumers alike and reduce the appeal of equity investments.
"We are in the phase of the economic cycle where you are recovering with spare capacity. But at some point you will run out of slack. We are approaching that period but we are not there yet," said Steven Bell, director of global macro at F&C Investments.
"It's still positive for equities but we are moving into the space where the biggest space is to be short bonds."
Bell's own positions include a modestly long one on global equities and a short one on British gilts, whose prices fell on Wednesday as the market moved to price in a hike sooner.
The FTSE share index, meanwhile, edged lower after the jobs data, to trade down 7.66 points, or 0.1 percent, on the day at 6,826.60 points by 1139 GMT.
The retreat came after the index, which is in overbought territory according to the 7-day relative strength indicator (RSI), hit an eight-month high of 6,867.42 points on Tuesday.
Analyst downgrades were behind most of the key single stock fallers, as they raised concerns about the weak start to the earnings season and the stretched valuations.
Royal Bank of Scotland fell 3.1 percent after UBS downgraded the stock to "sell" from "neutral", saying that the share price already reflects much of the progress that they think the group will make in the next 18 months.
While company specific, such concerns underscore a broader trend of stretched valuations, with analysts saying that company earnings now need to show strong growth to justify any further gains in share prices.
So far, though, the company updates are not really delivering. Brewing giant SABMiller fell for a second day as Tuesday's disappointing sales figures translated into price target downgrades from the likes of Credit Suisse, Exane BNP Paribas and Deutsche Bank.
Meanwhile shares in William Hill, which issued a trading update last week, suffered after HSBC cut its price target to 350 pence, which was below current levels.
"Valuation is not compelling given threats to earnings and we see little to attract the marginal buyer," it said in a note.
Overall, Thomson Reuters StarMine SmartEstimates predict that FTSE 100 companies will on average miss consensus 2013 earnings expectations by 0.8 percent, based on the up-to-date forecasts from the historically most accurate analysts.
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UK unemployment: challenge for Carney as jobless rate expected to fall

Falling unemployment has raised speculation the Bank of England could alter or abandon its forward guidance policy
Britain's unemployment rate is expected to have come down again when official data are released on Wednesday morning, bringing cheer to the government but a challenge to the Bank of England.
Economists forecast the jobless rate edged down to 7.3% in the three months to November from 7.4% in the three months to October, according to a Reuters poll.
That would be the lowest rate for more than four-and-a-half years and continues the trend of unemployment falling faster than BoE policymakers had been expecting. That has raised speculation the Bank will alter, or even abandon, its forward guidance policy, under which it vows not to consider an interest rate rise until unemployment has fallen to 7%.
The improving headline figures on the labour market from the Office for National Statistics echo business surveys indicating many firms are more optimistic about hiring now the recovery is picking up pace.
"We believe that it should be very easy for the unemployment rate to fall to 7.3% in this week's November reading and more likely will fall to 7.2%," says Alan Clarke, economist at Scotiabank.
James Knightley at ING said the labour market data was likely to show "broad strength".
"The UK has created nearly 1.3 million jobs since the nadir of the labour market in early 2010, 250,000 of them in the past three months alone. Initially they were largely part-time jobs focused in London and the south-east, but increasingly they are full-time positions and located all around the country," he said.
The latest manufacturing sector survey from the CBI on Tuesday showed a bigger proportion of companies expect to lift their employment over the coming quarter. Howard Archer, economist at IHS Global Insight, said that "fuels belief that the unemployment rate could very well get down to the critical 7% threshold level, under which the Bank of England could raise interest rates, by the middle of this year".
But not everyone believes the jobs recovery is evenly spread across the UK. The TUC trade unions group this week said the recent pickup in jobs had failed to reach the north-east, the north-west, Wales and the south-west, leaving them in the same situation or worse at providing jobs than they were 20 years ago.
At the same time, although employment has picked up, wage rises have remained on average below inflation, meaning many workers are worse off in real terms.
Economists forecast Wednesday's data will show annual average earnings growth of 1% for November, excluding bonuses. That marks an increase from 0.8% growth in October but is still well below inflation which came in at 2% for December.
At the same time as the unemployment data, the Bank of England releases the minutes to its latest policy meeting. Policymakers held rates at their record low of 0.5% at the meeting but economists think there was probably a discussion among members of the monetary policy committee (MPC) as to whether the unemployment threshold should be lowered.
Samuel Tombs at the thinktank Capital Economics said: "Some of the more hawkish members might be in favour of sticking to the original guidance. But we suspect that a majority will have begun to consider how they could alter their guidance in order to get market interest rates and sterling down from present levels that, if left unchecked, could soon begin to take some of the pace out of the recovery. Indeed, we believe that there is a strong chance that the MPC will lower the unemployment threshold next month to coincide with the Inflation Report."
Some economists say it is time to move on from forward guidance.
Rob Wood, chief UK economist at Berenberg bank, says the Bank should "let forward guidance wither" and return to targeting inflation.
"When the BoE introduced forward guidance just six months ago, they saw only a 50% chance that unemployment would fall to 7% by mid-2016. That is now likely in the next few months," he said.
"Lowering the unemployment threshold would unnecessarily tether the BoE to a dangerously low target. A rate rise is not needed now, but it will be needed before unemployment gets to 6.5%."
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