The sky is not falling in, says CBI chief, but then the fog is pretty thick and can the pound go back into orbit?

The CBI struck a note of caution yesterday. Merrill Lynch was more downbeat on the US, but played a happier tune on Europe. But what does it all mean for the dollar and pound?

“I can bring you one important piece of news from my travels around Britain’s businesses,” said CBI Director General Richard Lambert last night. “Contrary to what you might expect from the news background, the sky is not falling in.”

Mr Lambert was speaking at the CBI South West Annual Dinner. He contrasted the crisis today with 1929, but said there was one “big difference,” central banks and authorities are “acutely aware of the dangers of systemic risk.”

Mr Lambert is right. Fed chairman Ben Bernanke made his name in academia with his studies on the US depression of the 1930s.

Mr Lambert said: “All this explains why we came up with the view that the recession will be mild and shallow, and that things will start to look better in 2010.”

Then again, an increasing number of economists have said the policies followed by Hank Paulson are similar to those adopted by Andrew Mellon, US Treasury Secretary in 1929.

Yesterday, Merrill Lynch released revised forecasts for the global economy for next year. It expects the UK to expand by 0.3 per cent. That is not good, but neither is this especially gloomy. In fact, the OECD also predicted a 0.3 per cent growth rate for the UK recently, while the CBI forecast a 0.6 per cent expansion. Last month, the IMF predicted 1.1 per cent growth for the UK in 2009.

Perhaps of more significance than Merrill’s forecast for the UK is its prediction for the US; it expects the US economy to contract next year by 0.2 per cent.

The investment bank, which is becoming a part of Bank of America, expects modest growth next year in the Eurozone and Japan.

Actually, the Merrill Lynch forecast does make sense. One of the oddities of economic performance this year is that countries such as Germany and Japan, where consumer debt is much more modest, seemed to have suffered quarters of negative growth first, and before the highly indebted economies.

But it appears that in both cases the main factor in the two economies dragging growth down was the high price of oil and other commodities. (By the way it is consumers and business who have modest debt in Japan; government debt is enormous.)

It was the recent weak performance in the Eurozone which led to the sharp rises in the dollar, but if the US does indeed contract next year, while the Eurozone grows, then it would seem likely the dollar may fall back.

It is also the case that GDP measured in dollars is much higher across most of the Eurozone than it is when measured at purchasing power parity. This is also the case with the UK.

By contrast, in most developing countries GDP measured at purchasing power parity is much greater than GDP measured in dollars.

This may suggest the dollar is overvalued against currencies in the developing world, but undervalued against the euro and pound.

Incidentally, the gap between GDP measured in dollars and at purchasing power parity is greater in the UK than in most Eurozone countries – suggesting the dollar is even more overvalued against the pound than the euro.

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European inflation may have peaked – is it in time?

The Eurozone and its neighbours seem to have caught a nasty dollop of US misery. Economic woe is spreading, but at last good news, real good news, seems to have emerged on inflation. Maybe the Eurozone can shake off the jitters of mid-2008, and get back on track?

Latest data out during the last few days revealed that Germany’s GDP contracted by 0.5 per cent in the second quarter; France also saw contraction and now the Bank of France is predicting growth of just 0.1 per cent in the current quarter. Spain expanded by 0.1 per cent in Q2 – remember Spain has been expanding very rapidly indeed until recently, and while many expected the pace of growth to slow, few expected Spain to move so close to recession territory so quickly.

Even Scandinavia is feeling the pinch. Denmark has already hit recession, while house prices in Copenhagen are down 1.7 per cent over the last 12 months, or so says the Association of Danish Mortgage Banks.

At least in the land of the fjords things seem to be keeping up. Mainland Norway saw a mild contraction in Q1, but in its second quarter the economy expanded at a brisk 0.6 per cent.

It could be argued that much of the Eurozone’s problems are self-inflicted. The ECB has taken far too tough a stance on interest rates – but then, equally, it is possible that the ECB, by acting so precipitately, has managed to avoid the development of deeper problems.

Official statistics suggest the Eurozone CPI rate fell in July, from 3.3 per cent the previous month to 3.1 per cent. Maybe at last we are seeing signs of the inflation beast returning to its cave.

If this does happen, markets will not be surprised. As Capital Economics puts it: “The breakeven inflation rate on constant maturity 10-year index-linked OATs has already declined by over 40bp since the beginning of July.”

If the price of oil really does stabilise at its current level, it has been calculated that as much as 1.9 percentage points could be knocked off inflation within 9 months. Presumably, if oil falls in price, inflation will fall even further. Add to that the deflationary effects of the credit crunch, and the poor showing in economic growth, and it seems there are good reasons to believe Eurozone inflation could fall rapidly. This in turn could allow the ECB to realign interest rates, and perhaps a lot more quickly than people expect.

The Eurozone surprised many by moving close to recession so quickly. It is possible that, because the ECB kept such a tight lid on inflation, the region may be way ahead of the US and UK, and be the first to recover.

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Eurozone contracts in second quarter – it’s official

At first glance it all seems rather alarming. The Eurozone was supposed to take up the fiery torch of economic growth, and run with it before once again setting the UK and US economies alight, this time with an export based recovery. At first this seemed to be happening, with a string of positive economic stories emerging earlier this year from the region – especially from Germany. But now, it is as if the one thing the Chinese dreaded the most as their Olympic torch travelled the world has happened, and the fire has gone out.

In the second quarter of this year the economies of Germany, France, Italy and Ireland all contracted. Spain managed to avoid contraction – but more and more are now predicting recession is imminent for the Spanish economy.

This was not supposed to happen. Sure, the Irish and Spanish economies suffered from an unsustainable housing boom and debt bubble, but most of the region was a paragon of prudent export and investment led growth. It had been a similar story in Japan, by the way. Savings are up, consumer spending modest, yet the economy of the Rising Sun has also suffered a contraction in GDP during the second quarter.

So how has it happened? Well in answering that question, we can at last reveal some good news.

Okay, Italy is a basket case. It seems likely the Italian economy will continue to lurch from one crisis to the next for the foreseeable future. Ireland and Spain are very Anglo Saxon in their economic challenges – both economies seem set to see a nasty fall in house prices which will spill over to the economy at large.

But closer examination of the big two, France and Germany, reveals a more promising story.

In the case of Germany, it appears growth was too high in the previous quarter – and we have just seen a reaction to this. Q1 saw the economy expand by a very impressive 1.3 per cent. The second quarter, on the other hand, contracted by 0.5 per cent, but remember this is quarter-on-quarter data. Combine the two quarters, then overall the growth rate was pretty respectable.

But the Eurozone suffered from an additional problem, and it was this that caused such turmoil in France. The Eurozone is struggling because the cost of living is rising fast. It seems the high cost of oil and food is really taking its toll on many Eurozone economies. At the same time, the European Central Bank (ECB) is the most hawk-like of all the world’s major central bankers. While the Fed has slashed rates, and the Bank of England has made soft noises about interest rates, the ECB and its president Jean-Claude Trichet have been swooping over the interest rates landscape like a hawk planning a feast of doves for its ravenous family.

It is true that, in addition to Ireland and Spain, house prices are too high in many Eurozone economies. Capital Economics recently predicted French house prices would fall by 10 per cent, but then again, the UK, Spain, Ireland and the US would love it if the prognosis for their own markets were that good.

Some have argued that the recent news of the Eurozone contraction is proof its central bank misread the situation, and that it should have taken a leaf out of the Fed’s book, and slashed rates.  But that is only true if you take a short-term view.

Surely the ECB, by focusing on inflation, is getting the pain over with more quickly. The recovery should be all the more rapid, as a result.

If you consider the reasons for the Eurozone slowdown, then it seems reasonable to assume that if oil and other commodity prices fall, then the economy will soon pick up. As was argued above, there are very good reasons for believing oil will fall. Food, too, is showing signs of dropping off.

But, even if commodity prices don’t fall, but instead merely stop rising, then because the ECB has been so tough with interest rates, it seems Eurozone inflation will go into reverse much sooner than in the US and UK; as a result, Eurozone interest rates will then be able to fall more rapidly.

And that is where the potential recovery can come from in the US and UK. Well, at least partially anyway. China, India, and Japan and the rest of Asia will play their part too. For Japan, the story is much the same as Europe. Just like Europe there are good reasons to believe the contraction will be short-lived. As for China, well it was told here earlier this week that there is strong evidence to suggest China is consuming more and importing more.

But there is a fly in the ointment. It often feels as if many economists have underestimated how serious the problems in the US and UK are.

The fact is, the US and UK are Germany’s second and third biggest customers. The US is Japan’s biggest customer. For France, neither the UK nor US are so important, but there must surely be a question mark on the prospects of a Eurozone recovery if these two big consumers of the world’s products hit the buffers.

It is now time to turn our attention to the two big economic developments yesterday which hit the two big Anglo Saxon economies.

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Spanish house prices to crash 25 per cent

And the rain in Spain jumps out of the drain.

Right now, things in Spain seem to be a lot like the UK, only more so.

While we fret about inflation going over 4 per cent, in Spain the 5 per cent mark has been breached.

Spanish inflation in July hit 5.3 per cent, from 5 per cent in June and a Eurozone average of 4.1 per cent.

But the big concern relates to Spanish house prices.

Over the last ten years, Spanish house prices rose by 175 per cent, but in the second quarter prices fell, the first negative quarter in over ten years.

Meanwhile, retail sales recently fell by 7.7 per cent, consumer confidence has fallen off the edge of a steep cliff and unemployment is rising fast.

Now Capital Economics has revised its prediction for falls in Spanish houses – it now reckons prices will fall by a total of 25 per cent.

Its European economist Ben May said: “The downturn in the wider Spanish economy will not be short lived. With house prices set to fall sharply throughout 2009, we doubt that there will be any meaningful pick-up in GDP growth until the start of 2010 at the earliest.”

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Eurozone stares recession in the face

For the last year or so, there seemed to be reasons to believe that the Eurozone was set to carry the baton of economic growth in the developed world. After all, with the exception of Spain and Ireland, economies in the region were less reliant on house prices. Furthermore, consumer indebtedness was much lower than in the UK and US.

A criticism aimed at the UK is that we don’t actually produce anything – or at least not much. The UK benefits from a kind of virtual world. Maybe the most important sector of the UK – the City, is jut one massive shuffler of money. Critics of the UK compare this with Germany, that has an economic base you can actually see and touch.

The monuments of British economic success seem to be the Stock Exchange, and the impressive bank head offices in London. The monuments to the German economy seem to be well made, solid cars and workers busy in their overalls.

And yet, all of a sudden, it seems as if the Eurozone could beat both the UK and US into recession.

Yesterday, for example, saw the release of some pretty dismal figures on industrial output in the Eurozone.

Italian industrial production was down by 0.1 per cent, German industrial production rose, but only by 0.2 per cent. To put that in context, production in Germany fell by 1.8 per cent the previous month.

Last week it was told here how Economic Sentiment Indicators (ESI) have fallen dramatically in Germany, France, Spain and Italy.

Earlier this week it was reported that output in Germany may have contracted in the quarter just gone.

Capital Economics reckons the second quarter may well have seen a contraction in Eurozone GDP. It says: “Unless the surveys strengthen markedly in the next few months, there would seem to be a very good chance that euro-zone GDP will contract in Q3 too. With output having risen in Q2 in the US and UK, this would mean that the euro-zone would be the first major economy to enter a technical recession, defined by two consecutive quarters of falling output.”

And in the race to hit recession first, it seems that the Eurozone’s big rival is Japan. Capital Economics reckons the economy of the Rising Sun may well have contracted in Q2 too, although it does expect a pick-up in Japan in Q3.

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Eurozone stutters

As you probably know, the baton is supposed to be with the Eurozone now. US and British consumers have run out of puff. The Eurozone is supposed to be out of its wilderness years, and taking off where the US and UK left off, and carrying the torch of growth.

But, instead, the last few weeks have seen the news from Europe get worse and worse. Many economists are now speculating that the region could hit recession, while the US and UK still keep their heads above water.

The last few days have seen two rather nasty pieces of news break in the region of the euro. But at least Germany is still lighting the way forward, and in France a certain amount of reality has finally dawned on the all-too-safe workplace.

One of the key indicators of the Eurozone economy is the Economic Sentiment Indicator (ESI). This is a composite index taking into account confidence amongst consumers, and in the industrial services and construction sector.

July saw this index fall to its lowest level since March 2003. At 89.5, it implies Eurozone growth in the months ahead of just 0.5 per cent.

The index was down across the board, but in Italy it is downright awful.

ESI Index data supplied by Capital Economics

Eurozone Germany France Italy
104.1 105.4 109.6 97.6
99.6 104 105.6 93.7
89.5 97.3 93.5 85.4

Yet, while sentiments fall, Eurozone inflation just gets worse.

In July, Eurozone headline inflation hit 4.1 per cent. It had already passed the all-time high a few months back, so from now, on any rise is a new record – and so it was in July.

Alas, the official data does not reveal news on core inflation for a few more days. But what we can say is that up to now, core inflation, that’s with food and energy taken out, has remained modest. So there are no signs then that the rising oil and food prices are creating a spillover effect.

eu inflation

Even so, the European Central Bank has shown itself to be inclined to take a much tougher stance on inflation than the Fed and Bank of England. So, while the fall in confidence indices suggests rates need to fall, it seems unlikely this will happen for a while.

But at least there is good news from Germany, where data out yesterday revealed that unemployment in Germany remained at a 16-year low in July. Unemployment stands at 7.8 per cent.

Last week, the parliament in France finally passed a law to scrap their 35-hour working week. This was, of course, one of the key reforms Mr Sarkozy has been gunning for. The French economy desperately needs reform of the labour market – but it will take some time before this reform impacts upon the economy.

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Eurozone crawls to near standstill too, but at least the French put in the extra hours

And now to cap it all, Europe is in a mess again. But, at least headless Nick Sarkozy is getting something right.

Earlier this week Spain’s finance minister Pedro Solbes cut growth forecasts from 2.3 to 1.6 per cent for 2008. But with Spanish house prices falling even faster than its banks can buy up British banks, with Spain’s economy far more reliant on construction than most other economies, it seems likely this is just one of many cuts in forecasts to follow.

Meanwhile, the Eurozone PMI indices for manufacturing and services are now both getting into danger territory, with both below the critical 50 no-change mark for two months in a row. The manufacturing index dropped from 49.2 points in June to 47.5 in July and the services index 49.1 to 48.3.

The French composite PMI index now stands at a level which implies GDP will fall by 0.4 per cent. The German index is faring better, and is suggesting 0.2 per cent growth for Germany.

Meanwhile, the German ifo index reflects the business climate has been falling fast lately too. Both the ifo expectations and current conditions indices are at their lowest levels since the autumn of 2005, although it is worth pointing out the index has had something of a golden patch during this period, and is still above the historical trend.

But, in France, parliament has finally passed a law to scrap their 35-hour working week. This was of course one of the key reforms Mr Sarkozy has been gunning for.

It is a curious thing, but French productivity per hour is extraordinarily high. One possible explanation for this is that many French workers are understating how many hours they work. They know they can’t get their work done in 35 hours, so they are just putting in the extra time and not declaring it.

In the UK, the winner of the TV show the Apprentice won despite being caught out lying on his CV, and embellishing the truth. In France it appears they lie through understating the truth.

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Eurozone ups rates; will more hikes follow?

As you probably know, central bankers have a tendency to talk in code.    And yesterday it was the European Central Bank’s turn.

As expected, and predicted here yesterday, the ECB upped the rate of interest.   This will not endear its President Jean-Claude Trichet to certain European politicians, Mr Sarkozy, for example, but then the ECB’s top man has made it clear he is worried about inflation.

He had even warned it could “explode,” if the ECB did not take action.

Well, yesterday he took that action, and the Eurozone rate of interest is now 4.25 per cent, just ¾ per cent shy of the British rate. 

But the key this time was in what Mr Trichet did not say.  For Mr Trichet did not utter the words ”in a state of heightened alertness.”   And that was enough to leave commentators saying the ECB has had enough, its run of increasing rates is over.

Jennifer McKeown, at Capital Economics said: “the marked slowdown in economic activity that is already underway should ensure that wages growth remains well-contained and headline inflation starts to ease back later this year. As a result, not only do we think that today’s hike will be a one-off, but we see interest rates falling to around 3.0 per cent  by the end of 2009. This profile is still far weaker than that priced in by the markets, suggesting scope for bond yields and the euro to fall back further.”

But on the other hand, perhaps the single biggest reason why inflation is not expected to develop into an upward spiral in the UK and US does not apply to the Eurozone.

Trade union reform in the early 1980s has led to a labour market here and across the pond that is flexible, and far less likely to enforce inflationary wage rises. It is far from certain this argument applies to the Eurozone.

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“Inflation could explode,” says ECB chief

Inflation in the Eurozone hit a new all-time high in June, with the HCIP rate coming in at 4 per cent.

And yet, just like in the UK and US, core inflation, that’s the inflation central bankers are supposed to worry about, is still modest.  The official data does not yet provide details on how the June inflation figures are broken down into regions and into core and headline inflation.   But Capital Economics reckons core inflation, that’s with food and energy taken out, is around 18 per cent.

But while the Fed and Bank of E talk about how they expect inflation to drop back later in the year, the European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet told Die Welt newspaper that unless the bank takes action “inflation could explode.”

He added: “After having carefully examined the situation, we could decide to move our rates a small amount in our next meeting in order to secure the solid anchoring of inflation expectations, taking into account the situation… I don’t say it’s certain. I say it’s possible.”

Today we will know, but most seem to expect a Eurozone rate increase.

But Jean-Claude’s hawk-like pose has not endeared him to Eurozone politicians.

When Nicholas Sarkozy made his maiden speech to the European parliament back in November, he laid into the bank, and talked about removing its independence unless it became more open and accountable. Or, in other words, unless it independently concludes it agrees with the French premier, its independence is perhaps not such a good idea.

Yet, there is a good reason for the ECB to be tougher on inflation than Bernanke and King.

In the Eurozone, it appears the labour market is far more rigid.  Job losses are harder to enforce, demand for wage increases harder to resist.

In a way, Mr Sarkozy’s soft tone on inflation says it all.  In some parts of the Eurozone, although not Germany, inflation is not seen as the threat it is here.

This means the ECB has to compensate.

There is no evidence yet of mounting wage inflation in the UK or the US.  That is why central banks still feel quite sanguine about inflation in those two countries. 

But the rise in headline inflation leading to higher wages remains a very real threat in the Eurozone.

And that is why the Eurozone interest rate is likely to rise a lot further yet, and may even go above the UK rate in the next year or so.

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Ireland hits recession

Well, we won’t know for sure for several months.  But, according to the latest official data, the Irish economy contracted by 0.2 per cent in the first quarter of this year, and annual rate of growth fell from plus 5.5 per cent to minus 1.5 per cent.

With the Irish housing market collapsing faster than in the UK, construction output fell by almost 9 per cent.

According to Capital Economics: “There are very good reasons to believe that the worst is far from over. After all, the property downturn is still in full swing, with house prices now having fallen in each of the last 15 months. Prices are down by around 12 per cent from their peak and look set to drop considerably further. We have previously estimated that they will fall by 20%, but this is starting to look like a conservative estimate. Needless to say, this points to further sharp falls in construction output and investment.”

Jonathan Loynes, Chief European Economist, said: “All-in-all then, it seems clear that the Irish party is well and truly over and that the hangover is finally kicking in. It now looks like the economy will barely grow at all on average in 2008 and there is a very strong chance of an outright recession.”

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