Minutes of Monetary Policy committee meeting (2008-03-05)
mpc:
MINUTES OF THE MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEE MEETING HELD ON 5-6 MARCH 2008
1
Before turning to its immediate policy decision, the Committee discussed financial market
developments; the international economy; money, credit, demand and output; and costs and prices.
mpc: 2
Sentiment in international credit and money markets appeared to have deteriorated over the
month. Term interbank spreads had risen in the US and UK money markets, probably reflecting
heightened concerns about counterparty credit risk. Conditions in primary markets for securitised
assets remained difficult and there had been a general widening of spreads on asset-backed securities
(ABS). Spreads on US and UK investment-grade corporate bonds had risen sharply. Spreads had also
risen in the US municipal bond market.
mpc: 3
It was difficult to pinpoint the precise reasons for this change. The recent financial reporting
season for European banks had not produced any major unexpected losses or problems with reported
capital buffers. There had been some encouraging news about the possible recapitalisation of the
major non-bank financial guarantors (the `monolines'). However, as various asset prices fell, highly
leveraged borrowers were being forced to sell assets in the face of increased margin calls, thereby
possibly amplifying the downward movement in asset prices. That further encouraged lenders to try to
reduce overall exposures to such borrowers. These concerns had probably been heightened by
developments in the US municipal bond market and the failure of the Peloton Partners ABS hedge
fund in the United Kingdom. Increasing default rates on US mortgages had brought into question the
quality of securitised mortgages with higher credit ratings than those in the sub-prime category. The
continuing uncertainty about where asset prices would settle was discouraging potential investors from
buying, not least because they might fear posting substantial mark-to-market losses in the short run.
mpc: 4
International market interest rates had risen over the month, with forward rates for the end of
2008 some 10 to 20 basis points higher, perhaps reflecting a growing awareness of upside risks to
inflation and central banks' likely reaction to them. Longer-term forward rates had also risen,
although, perhaps surprisingly, these increases had been associated with rises in long-term risk-free
real interest rates, which might have been expected to fall, given the apparent `flight to quality' in
bond markets. As for inflation break-even rates, these had increased noticeably on the month only in
the euro area, and only at horizons under five years and over fifteen.
mpc: 5
Equity prices ended the month broadly unchanged, as earlier gains had been lost over the few
days prior to the MPC meeting. The comparative resilience of equity markets had been surprising,
given that market interest rates had risen. Investment analysts' earnings expectations had been revised
downward, and spreads on corporate bonds had widened sharply, reflecting increased risk aversion
and/or perceptions of increased corporate credit risk. However, non-financial corporate default rates
had not yet picked up significantly.
mpc: 6
The major news in the foreign exchange markets had been the continued fall of the US dollar, for
which the effective exchange rate index was some 3% lower than a month earlier. The euro effective
rate had appreciated by around 2%, while the sterling effective rate had fallen around 1½% over the
month. These movements appeared to be broadly consistent with conjunctural developments and
expectations of larger cuts in US and UK policy rates than in the euro-area rate. Options prices
suggested that market participants believed that movements in sterling had become more closely
correlated with the dollar and, possibly to some extent reflecting that, the risks to the sterling effective
exchange rate were skewed to the downside.
mpc:
The international economy
mpc: 7
For the United States, the main question was how long the current downturn would last and how
deep it would be. There had been little news in the latest estimate for growth in the fourth quarter of
2007, which was unchanged from the previous release at 0.2%. Data for the first quarter of 2008 so far
suggested that growth had been subdued. On the output side, industrial production had risen slightly in
January but the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) index for manufacturing for February had
fallen to a little below the 50 no-change level. The ISM non-manufacturing index had rebounded in
February to just above the 50 level from a very low January reading, but had remained well below its
historical average. Expenditure indicators were also lacklustre. The Federal Reserve's
Beige Book
suggested that the slowdown was now broadly based by industry sector and region. Bank lending to
the US corporate sector remained robust, but that might reflect the drawing down of credit lines agreed
before the deterioration in credit market conditions last August and the inability of banks to sell on
corporate loans. Data on both activity and prices suggested that the US housing market had continued
to weaken. Despite the fall in the federal funds rate, some households were facing higher interest
rates. Consumer confidence measures had fallen further in February, with the Michigan measure
hitting a 16-year low. Meanwhile, indicators of inflation had risen. Annual producer price inflation
had reached 7.4% in January, while headline inflation according to the personal consumption
expenditure deflator and CPI had increased to 3.7% and 4.3% respectively.
mpc: 8
In the euro area, data on the expenditure components of GDP in the fourth quarter had suggested
that consumption had been surprisingly weak. Activity indicators for the first quarter were in line with
the expectations embodied in the February
Inflation Report. The February services and manufacturing
Purchasing Managers' Index measures, for example, were both consistent with positive, but below-
trend, growth. The European Commission's surveys of business confidence in the industrial and
services sectors painted a similar picture. Lending to the corporate sector appeared to be holding up,
and it was less clear that euro-area banks as a whole had had the same experience as US banks with
`stuck' loans and committed credit lines. As in the United States, producer price inflation had
increased, reaching 4.9% in January. HICP inflation remained at 3.2% in February, above the level
deemed by the European Central Bank to be consistent with price stability.
mpc: 9
In Asia, the estimate of Japanese GDP growth in Q4 had been 0.9%, markedly stronger than
expected. However, Japanese GDP data were often revised substantially. Industrial production was
reported to have fallen 1.9% in January, but export growth had held up. Growth in the fourth quarter
in non-Japan Asia had also been somewhat higher than expected at the time of the February
Inflation
Report. China posted an annual growth rate of 11.2% and was showing signs of increasing
inflationary pressures. Annual producer price inflation had risen to 6.1% in January and annual
consumer price inflation hit an eleven-year high of 7.1%.
mpc: 10 World commodity prices had continued to rise rapidly over the month. The price of Brent crude,
for example, had reached a new high, increasing by 12% in sterling terms. A range of factors were
responsible, with the importance of each factor varying by commodity. Some of the price increases
would affect consumer prices rapidly, while others might take a long time to work through the supply
chain. It seemed unlikely that these inflationary pressures would abate soon, despite the slowdown in
advanced economies. First, demand for commodities from emerging markets, particularly in Asia, was
likely to continue to increase rapidly. For example, many of these economies still had much lower
energy use per head than did OECD countries, and some degree of convergence with advanced
economies was to be expected as the gap between levels of GDP per head narrowed. Second, OPEC
did not seem inclined to increase oil production quotas. Third, in several emerging-market economies,
price subsidies continued to dampen any reduction in demand. Fourth, it was possible that
commodities had become a more attractive asset class to both financial intermediaries and ultimate
investors, perhaps partly as a hedge against a weakening US dollar and partly because of the current
problems in advanced economies' credit markets. Greater involvement of financial firms might also
affect the dynamics of commodity prices in the short run.
mpc:
Money, credit, demand and output
mpc: 11 The ONS
UK Output, Income and Expenditure data release had contained an unchanged estimate
of 0.6% for the Q4 GDP growth rate. On the output side, there had been some small downward
revisions to estimated growth in both services and manufacturing. However, the first release of
expenditure data had showed consumption growth slowing sharply to 0.2% and business investment
contracting by 0.5%, implying the weakest growth in final domestic demand for five years. The
contribution from net trade had increased, and the annual growth rate of stocks in 2007 was the fastest
since 1973. Overall growth had been only a little lower than in the third quarter, although private
sector output had slowed by more.
mpc: 12 These data raised the possibility that there had been a sharp and unanticipated slowing in
domestic demand growth, leading to an involuntary build-up of stocks. If that were the case, output
growth could be expected to fall during 2008 as firms sought to unwind this build-up. But there were
several reasons for caution. First, the initial ONS expenditure data releases, particularly for business
investment, were prone to substantial revisions. Second, most of the increase in stocks was reported to
have been in the construction sector, not the retail or manufacturing industries, and so did not
necessarily indicate a broad-based slowdown in the demand for goods and services. The Home
Builders Federation (HBF) survey suggested that stocks of homes and work in progress relative to
demand had been at their highest levels in the fourth quarter since the series began in 1992, which was
consistent with the sectoral pattern of stockbuilding reported by the ONS. Third, market intelligence
from retailers did not suggest that there had been such a sharp fall in retail spending growth in the
fourth quarter as a whole. Fourth, survey evidence did not show a sharp fall in demand for consumer
services.
mpc: 13 More timely indicators of consumption had been mixed. Retail sales volumes had rebounded in
January, growing by 0.8%, but the latest CBI
Distributive Trades Survey implied a slowing in
February. Interpretation of these data was complicated by uncertainty about both the seasonal
adjustment of retail sales data at this time of the year and the slowing of the retail sales deflator
relative to the analogous RPI series. The GfK headline measure of consumer confidence (seasonally
adjusted by the Bank) fell in February to its lowest level since 1992, with a further drop in the
proportion of respondents who thought that this was a good time to make a major purchase. The latter
might reflect a tightening in credit conditions facing households. The low levels of the GfK headline
and other consumer confidence measures might also reflect more general pessimism about economic
prospects.
mpc: 14 Investment intentions had so far been less affected by the turmoil in credit markets, although the
rate of growth of lending to the private non-financial corporate sector had slowed. The commercial
property sector remained under stress, with property prices continuing to fall significantly. There was
little news about the non-financial sectors in the broad monetary aggregates; the annual growth rate of
households' money had remained steady at around 9% in January, although private non-financial
firms' money had slowed somewhat.
mpc: 15 Output indicators for this quarter had shown some resilience, and did not seem consistent with a
slowdown in response to earlier unanticipated demand weakness. Both the manufacturing and services
CIPS/NTC activity measures picked up in February, and, together with January's data, suggested that
output growth in the first quarter might be a little above the level expected at the time of the February
Inflation Report.
mpc: 16 The housing market was evolving broadly in line with the assumptions underlying the February
Inflation Report projections. The average of the lenders' house price indices had fallen 0.4% in
February and the preview of both the backward and forward-looking Royal Institution of Chartered
Surveyors (RICS) survey price balances had suggested that they had fallen again in February. The
preview of the RICS sales-stock ratio had suggested that this had dropped to its lowest level for over a
decade. But the other RICS activity indicators were broadly unchanged and those provided by the
HBF had strengthened slightly. Mortgage approvals for house purchase had also increased a little.
The spread between two-year fixed rates on mortgages and swap rates (lagged one month) had
increased further and was now around a percentage point higher than in August last year, while the
annual growth rate of secured lending to households had fallen in January to its lowest level since
2001.
mpc: 17 Forward-looking surveys and feedback from contacts of the Bank's regional Agents were
consistent with the deceleration of demand in the February
Inflation Report's central projection. There
was little evidence that the downside risks to inflation from a sharper-than-expected slowdown in
activity, flagged as a risk in the February
Inflation Report, had begun to crystallise. But the impact of
the deterioration of credit conditions remained very uncertain.
mpc: 18 The Committee was briefed by the Treasury representative on the broad outlines of the
Chancellor's forthcoming Budget. An assessment by Bank staff of the implications for the economy
would be undertaken after the details were published.
mpc: 19 The contrast between the fairly strong official data for employment and the indications from
some of the surveys of a weakening labour market had increased. The Labour Force Survey measure
of employment was reported to have increased by 175,000 in the fourth quarter and the unemployment
rate had dropped to 5.2%. In most sectors, vacancies had been higher in the three months to January
than they had been in the previous three months. Total hours worked had fallen, which was consistent
with a reduction in labour hoarding or weakening labour demand. The KPMG/REC
Report on Jobs
for February suggested that vacancies had been increasing more slowly and growth in the demand for
labour slackening. The Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development had reported that the
proportion of businesses expecting to make some staff redundant in the near term had risen. The
Bank's Agents also reported a weakening of employment intentions.
mpc: 20 Pay settlements had remained steady in January, with the twelve-month measure at 3.4%;
shorter-run measures were lower. Earnings, including bonuses, had increased at an annual rate of
3.8% in the fourth quarter on the Average Earnings Index measure and 4.2% on the Average Weekly
Earnings measure. The corresponding figures excluding bonuses were 3.7% and 4.1%.
mpc: 21 In contrast to pay, other cost pressures had intensified. Manufacturers' input prices had risen
2.6% in January alone, taking the twelve-month rate to nearly 20%. In February, the input price
indices from the CIPS/NTC manufacturing and services surveys had picked up. Although the
increases had been mainly due to energy and food prices, the contribution of imported items had
generally continued to rise, partly reflecting sterling's depreciation. Manufacturing producer output
prices in January had risen at a twelve-month rate of almost 6%, its highest since 1990, while the CBI
Monthly Trends Enquiry and CIPS/NTC output price indicators had risen in February. A survey by the
Bank's regional Agents had suggested that firms selling directly to final consumers would not pass on
their higher costs in full. The extent and speed at which cost increases would pass through into retail
prices remained unclear.
mpc: 22 CPI inflation had risen in January to 2.2%, but that was a little lower than expected.
Households' inflation expectations had risen according to the Bank/NOP survey for February; the
median measure, at 3.3%, was 0.3 percentage points higher than in the previous quarter. Additional
questions in the February survey suggested that there were several reasons for the rise, given that
respondents said that they attached importance to a number of factors in forming their expectations,
including perceptions of past inflation, the level of interest rates, the strength of the economy, the
inflation target and media reports. In the light of the likely rise in CPI inflation over coming months,
that was not reassuring in respect of the upside risk to inflation from rising inflation expectations.
However, the more frequent Citigroup/YouGov survey measure had fallen back on the month, from
3.3% to 3.1%, and its measures of expectations of inflation in five to ten years had remained stable.
mpc:
The immediate policy decision
mpc: 23 The latest
Inflation Report had explained the balance of risks to inflation facing the Committee
in February. On the downside, there had been considerable uncertainty about the extent to which
demand would slow, reflecting the risks of a further tightening of credit conditions, both at home and
abroad. That entailed the possibility of a higher margin of slack in the economy than expected and
hence a downside risk to inflation in the medium term. But, on the upside, there had been a risk that
another period of above-target inflation, coming so soon after the previous one in 2006-07, might raise
medium-term inflation expectations. That implied a risk that upward shocks to inflation from
commodity prices, for example might persist longer than expected, as wage and price setters acted on
their revised expectations. Both the upside and downside risks persisted this month, and some of the
news suggested that the risks on both sides might have increased. The challenge facing the Committee
was to balance those risks in order to keep inflation on track to meet the target in the medium term.
mpc: 24 A further tightening of credit conditions remained possible. Sentiment had deteriorated in the
money markets and longer-term credit markets. Fears of asset price falls brought about in part by
forced selling on the part of hedge funds and other leveraged investors had increased. It remained very
difficult for banks to securitise lending. Spreads on mortgages and investment-grade corporate bonds
had risen. European banks' recent financial results had not produced any major adverse surprises, but
banks were facing more challenging conditions this quarter than had been expected.
mpc: 25 There was now mounting evidence of a weakening economy in the United States. But while
there were still downside risks to demand growth in the euro area and Asia, growth there did not seem
to be seriously affected by the problems in financial markets so far. In the euro area, consumption
growth had been surprisingly weak and the rise in the value of the euro would tend to reduce net
exports. In China, domestic demand was growing briskly and domestic policy was being tightened in
an attempt to contain inflation. Overall, this was consistent with the outlook for the world economy in
the February
Inflation Report.
mpc: 26 In the United Kingdom, indicators of activity in the current quarter had given mixed signals, but,
if anything, pointed to less of a slowdown than expected at the time of the February
Inflation Report.
Reports from the Bank's Agents still suggested that, outside the financial and property sectors,
business prospects had not deteriorated markedly. Although it was not sensible to put a great deal of
weight on the first data release for expenditure, the initial breakdown for 2007 Q4 raised the question
of whether the growth of final domestic demand had fallen more sharply than producers had
anticipated. Looking forward, surveys of consumer confidence had weakened.
mpc: 27 Against the downside risk to inflation in the medium term from weakening output prospects,
there were risks in the opposite direction from rising energy and other commodity prices. The news on
this front over the month had been adverse for near-term inflation prospects, with rises in oil and food
prices and increasing evidence of price pressures further down the supply chain. Supply responses
would be forthcoming eventually, but the upward pressure on the level of commodity prices was
unlikely to abate in the short term, given prospective global demand developments and short-run
supply constraints. In the United Kingdom, that was compounded by the fall in the sterling effective
exchange rate, which had been greater than expected at the time of the February
Report. UK producer
input and output price inflation had risen significantly, as had import price inflation. As commodity
and import price increases worked their way through the supply chain a process that could take some
time it was likely that the upward pressure on prices would extend beyond the energy and food
sectors where it had been most pronounced so far.
mpc: 28 Due to higher household gas and electricity prices, CPI inflation was likely to rise quite sharply
in the coming months. And rising cost pressures were also rippling through the supply chain. The
impact of these pressures on CPI inflation in the short term was, however, uncertain. The recent
survey by the Bank's Agents suggested that businesses facing consumers felt unable to pass all of their
cost increases forward to higher prices.
mpc: 29 Further ahead, inflation was likely to fall back as commodity prices stabilised. The extent to
which it did so would depend on whether inflation expectations remained anchored on the 2% target.
Measures of inflation expected over the next twelve months had risen recently but the evidence on
longer-term inflation expectations was mixed.
mpc: 30 There was also a question about how quickly the economy would be able to expand without
placing additional upward pressure on inflation in the medium term. Real take-home pay had been
falling and, following the sharp rise in businesses' input costs, would need to fall further. Pay
settlements and earnings data offered some reassurance that there had been little, if any, pass-through
to wages so far. It was unclear whether employees would, to some degree, resist further erosion of
their spending power. If they did so, the rise in commodity prices could only be accommodated
without putting pressure on inflation if there were to be some rise in unemployment. Furthermore,
there was uncertainty about the extent to which the labour force would expand if the net inflow of
labour from Eastern Europe were to fall, now that the gap between real earnings had narrowed.
mpc: 31 The Committee discussed the balance of upside and downside risks to the inflation outlook. For
several members, the risks on both sides had increased over the past month. There was a range of
views about whether that had affected the balance significantly in either direction.
mpc: 32 For the majority of members, despite some differences in their assessments of the risks, the
balance of risks had not changed sufficiently to merit a change in Bank Rate this month. So far, output
and CPI inflation were evolving broadly in line with the central projection in the February
Inflation
Report. The economy appeared most likely to be roughly on track for CPI inflation to return to target
in the medium term. Although the central view was predicated on the assumption of some further
modest easing of Bank Rate, back-to-back reductions might lead observers to think that the Committee
was focusing on downside risks to demand at the expense of the medium-term outlook for inflation.
That in turn could lead to an exaggerated response of the market yield curve to a rate reduction. The
Committee would continue to review the balance of risks to inflation, and its implications for the
appropriate level of Bank Rate, as it received new information each month about the economic outlook
and the uncertainties around it.
mpc: 33 Some members saw the balance of risks differently. The prospects for the US economy had
deteriorated over the month; financial markets had taken a further turn for the worse and stressed
conditions were expected to last for longer. This increased the downside risk to UK growth in the
short term and to inflation further out. While the immediate pressures from oil and commodity prices
had increased, there was no sign that this was likely to feed through to wage settlements and the
Agents' survey confirmed the pressures on firms not to pass through cost increases in consumer prices.
The reductions in interest rates since last summer had been offset by increases in market rates so the
stance of policy might still be on the restrictive side of neutral. The evidence continued to point to the
need for some reduction this spring, broadly in line with the market expectations embodied in the yield
curve. The downside risks argued against delay so these members judged that a reduction in Bank
Rate of 25 basis points was appropriate this month.
mpc: 34 The Governor invited the Committee to vote on the proposition that Bank Rate should be
maintained at 5.25%. Seven members of the Committee (the Governor, Rachel Lomax, Kate Barker,
Charles Bean, Tim Besley, Andrew Sentance and Paul Tucker) voted in favour of the proposition.
John Gieve and David Blanchflower voted against, preferring a reduction in Bank Rate of 25 basis
points.
mpc: 35 The following members of the Committee were present: Mervyn King, Governor Rachel Lomax, Deputy Governor responsible for monetary policy John Gieve, Deputy Governor responsible for financial stability Kate Barker Charles Bean Tim Besley David Blanchflower Andrew Sentance Paul Tucker Dave Ramsden was present as the Treasury representative.