UK labor market

The ratio of unfilled job openings to the number of unemployed workers, a ratio that BoE Governor Bailey has consistently referenced, is falling quickly now and will more-than-likely be back to pre-Covid levels within the next couple of months. Unlike the US, where so far a fall in vacancies hasn’t been paired with an increase in joblessness, the UK is experiencing a undeniable increase in the number of people unemployed for less than six months. Unsurprisingly that tends to trigger increases in longer-term unemployment with a lag.

 

The vacancy-to-unemployment ratio is falling quickly

Source: Macrobond, ING calculations

 

The bottom line is that with the jobs market cooling and wage growth, for now at least, not coming in as hot, the labour market data does not scream a need for the Bank to keep hiking rates much further. The only thing that won’t please officials is that economic inactivity – that is the number of people neither employed nor unemployed – has started to rise again, driven by long-term si

The Euro Dips as German Business Confidence Weakens Amid Soft Economic Data

Mixed Signals: US Dollar Weakens, Eurozone Faces Recession, Pound's Fate Hangs in the Balance

InstaForex Analysis InstaForex Analysis 11.07.2023 09:05
The ADP report on employment in the private sector, published a day before the non-farm payroll data release, was so shocking that it instantly raised expectations for the labor market as a whole, leading to rapid repositioning on Friday before the data release. However, the non-farm payroll figures were significantly weaker than expected, with 209,000 new jobs created (225,000 expected), and data for the previous two months were revised downwards by 110,000. Employment growth is slowing, but the pace remains high. As for wage growth, the figures were an unpleasant surprise for the Federal Reserve. In June, wages increased again by 0.4% instead of the expected 0.3%, and annual growth rates remained at 4.4%, which is higher than the 4.2% forecast. Steady wage growth does not allow inflation expectations to fall, the growth of real rates does not allow the Federal Reserve to start lowering the rate this year.       The U.S. inflation index, which will be published on Wednesday, is the main event of the week and the last important data before the Fed meeting at the end of July. The markets expect an 89% probability of a quarter-point rate hike. Furthermore, the probability of another increase in November has already exceeded 30%, and the first cut is now expected only in May of next year. The U.S. dollar fell after the data release and ended the week weaker than all G10 currencies. The growth of real rates in the current conditions makes a recession in the U.S. almost inevitable.   EUR/USD The Sentix Economic Index for the eurozone has fallen for the third time in a row to -22.5 points, a low since November 2022, and expectations also remain depressed. The eurozone economy has fallen into a recession as of early July. The situation in Germany is even more depressing – the index has fallen to -28.5 points, and the possibility of improvement is ephemeral.     The ZEW index will be published on Tuesday, and the forecast for it is also negative, with a decrease from -10 points to -10.2 points expected in July. On Thursday, the European Commission will present its forecasts. Bloomberg expects that industrial production in the eurozone fell in May from 0.2% y/y to -1.1% y/y, a sharp decline that characterizes the entire eurozone economy as negative and tending to further contraction.   Under the current conditions, the European Central Bank intends to continue raising rates, and even plans to shorten the reinvestment period of the PEPP program. If this step is implemented, a debt crisis, which will put strong bearish pressure on the euro, is inevitable in the face of capital outflows to the U.S. and an expanding recession.   The net long position on the euro has hardly changed over the reporting week and amounts to just over 20 billion dollars, positioning is bullish, there is no trend. However, the calculated price is still below the long-term average and is trending downward.     The euro attempted to strengthen on Friday in light of the news, but it was unable to rise beyond the borders of the technical figure "flag", let alone higher than the local high of 1.1012. We assume that the corrective growth has ended, and from the current levels, the euro will go down, the target is the lower boundary of the "flag" at 1.0730/50. GBP/USD Updated data on the UK labor market will be published on Tuesday. It is expected that the growth of average earnings including bonuses increased in May from 6.5% to 6.8%, and if the data comes out as expected, inflation expectations will inevitably rise. As will the Bank of England's peak rate forecasts. The NIESR Institute expects that further rate increases could trigger a recession.   The cost of credit is rising, and an increase in the volume of bad debts is inevitable in an economic downturn. Inflation did not decrease in May, contrary to expectations, and remained at 8.7%, even though energy prices significantly decreased. Food inflation on an annual basis reached 18.3%, and core inflation at 7.1% is at its highest since 1992. The labor force is decreasing, and if this trend is confirmed on Tuesday, it will almost inevitably result in increased competition for staff, which will mean, among other things, the continuation of wage growth. The Bank of England has already raised the rate to 5%, with forecasts implying two more increases. What does the current situation mean for the pound?   If the economy can keep from sliding into a recession, then in conditions of rising nominal rates, the yield spread will encourage players to buy assets, leading to increased demand for the pound and its strengthening. However, if signs of recession intensify, which could be clear as soon as Thursday when GDP, industrial production, and trade balance data for May will be published, the pound will react with a decrease, despite high rate expectations. After impressive growth two weeks ago, pound futures have stalled at achieved levels, a weekly decrease of just over 100 million has no significant impact on positioning, which remains bullish.  
ECB Signals Rate Hike as ARM Goes Public: Market Insights

Assessing the State of the British Economy: Insights from Macroeconomic Readings and the BoE's Dilemma on Rate Hikes

Nick Cawley Nick Cawley 13.07.2023 13:00
Recent macroeconomic readings, including data on wages, GDP, and industrial production, have provided valuable insights into the current state of the British economy. These key indicators offer crucial information about the depth of the potential recession and the future course of action for the Bank of England (BoE). To shed light on these important developments, we reached out to Nick Cawley, Senior Strategist at DailyFX, for his expert analysis.   The persistent challenge faced by the BoE is the backdrop of persistently high inflation, which currently stands at 8.7%, well above the central bank's target of 2%. Simultaneously, the UK's economic growth remains lackluster, prompting the BoE to carefully assess the delicate balance between raising the borrowing rate to control inflation and avoiding a recession.     FXMAG.COM: What do this week's macroeconomic readings - wages, GDP, industrial production - tell us about the state of the British economy? Will the recession be deep? Will the BoE continue to raise rates?    Nick Cawley, Senior Strategist at DailyFX said: This week's economic data continue to highlight the problems that the Bank of England (BoE) face. Against a backdrop of relentlessly high inflation -  8.7% against the central bank's 2% target – and tepid UK growth, the BoE will need to gauge how much further they can lift the borrowing rate without sparking a recession.   The UK labor market remains robust, although cooling, with wage growth near record levels last seen during the pandemic period. This week's data show the UK unemployment rate rising to 4% in April, from a prior month's 3.8%, a small positive for the BoE in its fight against inflation, but soaring wage growth will likely keep pressure on consumer prices.    The latest Office for National Statistics (ONS) data show UK GDP flatlining in the three months to May, and indeed UK growth has been fairly stagnant since the start of 2022, not helped in part by rising borrowing. While the UK has avoided a technical recession so far, the likelihood that UK GDP may turn negative in the coming months is growing.   Recent inflation and jobs data all but guarantee that the UK central bank will hike the Bank Rate by a further 50 basis points to 5.50% at the next monetary policy meeting on August 3rd. The question then is what happens at the next meeting in the economic calendar on September 21. Will inflation fall sharply, as suggested on many occasions by BoE governor Andrew Bailey, or will data show the accumulative effects of prior rate hikes is taking effect? Add into the mixture UK mortgage costs are hitting multi-year highs and the BoE have a testing few months ahead. 
Turbulent Times: EU and China Service PMIs Raise Global Growth Concerns, UK Services PMI Improves, GBP/USD Faces Bearish Breakdown

Turbulent Times: EU and China Service PMIs Raise Global Growth Concerns, UK Services PMI Improves, GBP/USD Faces Bearish Breakdown

Ed Moya Ed Moya 06.09.2023 13:15
EU and China Service PMIs drive global growth concerns UK Final Services PMI revised higher but downward trend remains Fed’s Waller (hawk) says “There is nothing that is saying we need to do anything imminent anytime soon.” GBP/USD (daily chart) as of Tuesday (9/5/2023) has made a quick and strong breakdown below multiple support levels, indicating a potential bearish breakdown could target the 38.2% Fibonacci level, which resides at 1.2072.  A bearish near-term outlook has been in place over the past month on the decline of both the longstanding bullish support trendline that was in place since last October and below the 50-day SMA.  Price action is currently trading below the 100-day SMA and if downside continues, could target the 200-day SMA at 1.2421. Upward UK PMI revisions The British pound pared losses this morning after UK services data came in better-than expected, outperforming what came from the Eurozone and following the downbeat readings from China.  The UK service sector is still in contraction territory, standing at 49.5, but it did buck the trend we saw with the rest of Europe. While the service reading was revised higher from a preliminary reading of 48.7, the downward trend that started in April remains firmly in place. Central bank expectations Slowing global growth concerns are sending rate hike expectations lower across the board.  Fed fund futures now are only pricing in a 6.8% chance of a rate hike at the September 20th meeting and the November 1st odds are currently at 37.2%. The ECB rate hike odds for the September 14th meeting are now at 25.5% and the October 26th meeting has a 25.8% expectation for a rate increase. Both the BOE and Riksbank are the only central banks (advanced economies) that are close to fully pricing in rate increases at their respective September policy decisions.  The BOE appears poised to deliver two quarter-point rate increases as financial markets price a 97.6% chance of an increase at the September 21st meeting. Short-term drivers The GBP/USD pair reacted positively to Fed’s Waller’s comment that the data doesn’t say we need to do anything imminent.  Waller is considered one of the more hawkish Fed members, so this comment could help convince markets that the Fed is likely done raising rates. It appears that global sentiment will likely be the primary driver here for the British pound, but dollar weakness could emerge if more Fed officials signal the end of tightening has arrived.  If the UK labor market starts to loosen and household spending softens, BOE rate hike odds could come down and that could also fuel further downward pressure on sterling.  
UK Labor Market Signals a Need for Caution in Rate Hikes

UK Labor Market Signals a Need for Caution in Rate Hikes

ING Economics ING Economics 12.09.2023 09:40
The ratio of unfilled job openings to the number of unemployed workers, a ratio that BoE Governor Bailey has consistently referenced, is falling quickly now and will more-than-likely be back to pre-Covid levels within the next couple of months. Unlike the US, where so far a fall in vacancies hasn’t been paired with an increase in joblessness, the UK is experiencing a undeniable increase in the number of people unemployed for less than six months. Unsurprisingly that tends to trigger increases in longer-term unemployment with a lag.   The vacancy-to-unemployment ratio is falling quickly   The bottom line is that with the jobs market cooling and wage growth, for now at least, not coming in as hot, the labour market data does not scream a need for the Bank to keep hiking rates much further. The only thing that won’t please officials is that economic inactivity – that is the number of people neither employed nor unemployed – has started to rise again, driven by long-term sickness and a renewed rise in student numbers. In general the data has been saying that worker supply has been increasing, so this is something to keep an eye on.   Worker inactivity has begun to inch higher again   Ultimately we still expect a rate hike next week, but a number of BoE comments suggest that officials are laying the ground for a pause. We don’t totally rule that out next week, though remember we still have a round of inflation data due the day before the announcement. For now our base case is that September’s hike will be the last.      

currency calculator