British Ounce, US$, Toppled
by Tumbling Home Prices
By Gary Dorsch, Editor, Global Money Trends
Economic events in the United
States often provide a preview of what’s
around the corner for the British economy. Both countries run large external
trade deficits, and much like the US,
the British economy has been expanding on little else than the availability of easy
credit and asset price inflation in the housing market. The ties between the US
and UK run even
deeper. About half of the profits for FTSE companies come from overseas, and 15%
from US-based affiliates.
Imaginative lending practices fueled
a doubling of British home prices over the past six-years, the key engine of
growth for the world’s fifth largest economy. But British borrowers now face a
perilous situation where their home values are tumbling, and the local banking
oligarchs are lifting their lending rates, in order to recoup big losses of up
to 20 billion pounds in toxic sub-prime mortgages.
Little of the Bank of England’s (BoE) three rate cuts since December have been passed on to
debt strapped consumers, now locked in a genuine credit crunch. “Credit
conditions have tightened and the availability of credit appears to be
worsening. The disruption in financial markets could lead to a slowdown in the
economy that is sufficiently sharp to pull inflation below target,” explained the
BoE in order to justify its quarter-point rate cut to
5.00 percent.
In December 2003, then Chancellor
of the Exchequer Gordon Brown instructed the BoE to
keep a lid on the consumer inflation at 2% or less, by adjusting interest rates
upward, whenever inflation rose above target. Brown told the BoE to target the harmonized index of consumer prices
(HICP), adopted by the Euro zone, measuring the retail prices of goods and
services, but excluding volatile housing costs.

Yet the BoE
lowered its base rate to 5% this week, even though inflation is above the 2% target
and BoE chief Mervyn King has
predicted rising food prices and energy prices could lift the inflation rate higher
to 3 percent. Britain’s
major gas and electricity suppliers raised their prices by 15%, and the cost of
a basket of groceries is up 12%, increasing the average family food bill by 750
pounds per year. “Because we’ve got low inflation, we can cut interest rates,”
British PM Gordon Brown told the BBC.
Under heavy political pressure,
the BoE has abandoned “Inflation Targeting,” and
instead, is pursuing a radical policy of “Asset Targeting,” or adjusting
interest rates in order to influence the direction of home prices and the stock
market. The BoE has been a champion of “Asset
Targeting” for quite some time. In 2001, the BoE
slashed interest rates alongside the Greenspan Fed, with both central banks
attempting to inflate home prices and arrest the slide in equity markets.
The BoE
began to reverse its rate cuts a year earlier than the Fed, when British home
price inflation was sizzling at a 26% annualized clip in late 2002. Hiking
rates in slow motion over the next four years, the BoE
finally broke the back of real estate inflation, when it lifted its base lending
rate to 5.75% on July 5, 2007,
adding heavy pressure on households shouldering 1.3 trillion pounds of debt.

The Bernanke
Fed has also adopted “Asset Targeting,” and is slashing the fed funds rate at a
frantic pace in reaction to the sliding S&P Case Shiller
Home price Index, which is 11.7% lower from a year ago. The Fed is desperately
trying to put a floor under US home prices, by pegging interest rates far below
the inflation rate, rapidly expanding the MZM money supply (+17% yoy), and swapping hundreds of billions of US Treasuries
with bankers, in exchange for toxic AAA sub-prime mortgages.
However, BoE
chief King has rejected requests from British bankers to swap for toxic
mortgage-backed securities. “I want to assure you that the Bank will provide
the liquidity assistance that the system needs in order to restore confidence. Such
lending can be only a temporary measure, but it can be a useful bridge to a
longer-term solution. The BoE is not proposing
schemes that would require the taxpayer, rather than the banks, to assume the
credit risk.”
British bankers are now in a mini-panic,
after the International Monetary Fund said on April 5th that home
prices in the UK
and Ireland are
vulnerable to a sharp 30% correction. “Home prices that look particularly
vulnerable to a further correction are in Ireland,
the United Kingdom,
the Netherlands,
and France. In
these economies, it is difficult to account for the magnitude of the run-up in
house prices.”
In the UK,
the average home price is around £178,000, and if the IMF is correct, a 30%
slide would knock home values lower to around £124,000, leaving many homeowners
vulnerable to negative equity. In the US, somewhere between 10 and
15 million homeowners might find their homes are worth less than the amount of
their loans, with home prices roughly 11% lower from a year ago.
British home prices tumbled by 2.5%
in March, their biggest monthly decline since the early 1990’s. The annual pace
of house price inflation fell to 1.1%, the slowest annual growth rate for 12-years,
and could go negative as the credit crunch bites into the real economy. There
were just 49,000 loans made to UK
home buyers in February, the lowest level in 16-years, and 33% less than
February 2007. Thus, the BoE is still facing enormous
pressure from Prime Minister Gordon Brown to continue cutting rates as slumping
home prices threatens to topple the UK’s
asset based economy, rattled by the shocks emanating from the credit squeeze.

On the other side of the English
Channel, European Central Bank President Jean Trichet
is ruling out lower Euro interest rates anytime soon, and instead, is utilizing
a stronger Euro to shield the Euro zone economy from soaring food, energy, and
raw material import prices. In a veiled warning to stock market operators on
April 10th, “The level of uncertainty in financial markets remains
unusually high and tensions may last longer than initially expected. Financial
market turbulence could have a broader than currently expected impact on the
real economy,” Trichet said.
“Against this background, we
emphasize that maintaining price stability in the medium term is our primary
objective. There is certainly no room for complacency. Second-round effects
stemming from the impact of higher energy and food prices on wage and
price-setting behavior must be avoided. In the view of the Governing Council,
this is of key importance,” Trichet said.
With Euro interest rates on hold
in the months ahead and British interest rates edging lower, the Euro hit a
record high of 80.3 pence this week, up 17% from a year ago. The British
ounce’s interest rate advantage over the Euro has narrowed by 95 basis points
since September to +100 basis points today. The Euro also briefly hit a record
high of $1.5900 against the US dollar, amid ideas the Bernanke
Fed will lower the fed funds rate on April 30th, widening the Euro’s interest rate advantage.

Underscoring the British currency’s
weakness against the Euro, the UK economy has run a current
account deficit in every quarter since the third quarter of 1998. Last year, the UK’s
the current
account shortfall hit a record GBP 57.8 billion, up from GBP 50.7 billion in
2006. The deficit was equivalent to minus -4.2% of GDP versus
minus -3.9% in 2006. In contrast, the Euro zone reaped a 15 billion euro
current account surplus, or +0.2% of its economy’s output.
Part of Sterling’s
misfortune is linked to declining North Sea oil output,
which peaked in 2000 and fell 9% to 2.9 million barrels of oil equivalent last
year. The UK Offshore Operators Association expects North Sea
oil output to be 250,000 barrels lower on average over the remainder of the
decade. UKOOA is also predicting investment will fall to as little as £4bn this
year compared with £5.6bn last year, at a time when costs are rocketing due to
equipment shortages.
When a central bank of an
external deficit country lowers its interest rates, it opens its currency up to
speculative attack. The Euro zone accounts for about 60% of UK
exports, so the BoE is engineering a devaluation of
the British ounce, to boost UK
multinational income earned in the Euro zone and the US.
Interestingly enough, the BoE and the Federal Reserve
are pursuing similar policies, devaluing their currencies to boost exports and
multinational income, in order to offset the deleterious impact on consumer
spending at home, from sliding home prices.
But rarely can countries devalue
their way to prosperity. Most likely, the BoE’s and
Fed’s currency devaluation schemes will guide their economies deeper into the
“Stagflation” trap, plagued by escalating consumer and producer prices. The BoE has been inflating its M4 money supply at double-digit
rates for the past three years, and doubling the price of gold against the
British ounce, in the process.

The Fed’s strategy of jigging up the
stock market with massive injections of liquidity, is also back-firing, because
of crude oil’s new found role as an inflation hedge, against a weak US$ and the
money supply printed by the Fed. If Mr Bernanke tries to inflate the US money supply from a 17% rate
today to as high as 20% this summer, while the BoE is
also expanding the UK money supply, crude oil might climb towards $125 /barrel,
and lead to new headaches for the global economy.
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