Today’s market comment on behalf of Michael Brown Senior Research
Strategist at Pepperstone
UK employment figures show further signs of slack developing in the labour market.
Headline unemployment ticked higher to 4.3% in the three months to March, the highest
level since last July, although concerns remain over the reliability of the data, amid ongoing
ONS survey issues. While said concerns are not present in terms of the earnings component
of the report, said figures are likely to cause some concern on Threadneedle Street, with
regular pay growth having reaccelerated over the same period, to 5.7% YoY.
Clearly, such a pace of earnings growth is not consistent with a return to the BoE's 2%
inflation target, while upside earnings risks do remain, particularly with April's minimum wage
hike, and likely comparable earnings increases among other lower-wage earners, yet to feed
into the data. At the margin, today's wage data somewhat raises the risk of inflation
persistence within the UK economy, which is a factor that the MPC's hawks are likely to point
to as a reason to delay the first Bank Rate cut to the end of summer.
Despite that, headline inflation should still fall to the 2% target in both April and March,
primarily due to the impact of lower consumer energy prices, as a result of the lower Ofgem
price cap, exerting significant downward pressure on headline price metrics. This, of course,
must be coupled with the continued rise in joblessness, along with the likely need for a
looser policy stance in order to support the solid 0.6% QoQ pace of growth notched by UK
Plc in the first three months of the year.
Hence, the outlook for the BoE remains largely , with policymakers continuing to pay most attention to incoming inflation metrics, with the April CPI figures due next week. With that in mind, the base case remains that the
25bp Bank Rate cut will be delivered in June, with quarterly cuts beyond then, so long as the two inflation prints due before then are in line with, or better than, the Bank's latest forecasts. Today's data, however, increases the likelihood that such a decision to cut is unlikely to be a unanimous one among MPC members.
Zaid Barem, Your Mind Media